Lunar Sample Atlas
This library of images provides pictures of the Apollo samples taken in the Lunar Sample Laboratory, full-color views of the samples in microscopic thin-sections, cutting views and diagrams that illustrate how the samples were subdivided for scientific analyses, and in situ views of the samples on the lunar surface. The atlas contains information about the type of sample (e.g., rock, soil), the lithology (e.g., basalt, norite), and a description of the sample. Links to additional information about each sample are provided for those that have been previously described in The Lunar Sample Compendium and Lunar Sample Catalogs. Version 1 of the atlas was released in August 2009 and version 2 was released in July 2010. The process of scanning lunar sample images continues and the atlas will grow in the future.
A subset of this collection, the Apollo Thin Sections catalog, includes all samples for which thin-section views are available. Another subset, the Virtual Microscope catalog, provides interactive views of selected thin sections as they would be seen through a microscope. Another rich source of thin-section views by William Phinney (formerly with the NASA Johnson Space Center) and Howard Wilshire (formerly with the U.S. Geological Survey) is the Digital Petrographic Slide Collection, which is hosted by our colleagues at Arizona State University.
Sample Number | Mission | Sample Type | Lithology | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|
12001 | Apollo 12 | soil-general | 12001 is <1 cm fraction of bulk regolith collected about 30 meters northwest of the LM on the first EVA traverse. Astronaut Conrad saw several beads of pure glass while collecting this sample. Fryxell reports that the fines are weakly coherent; they adhere to rocks and do not slump when the sample holder is tipped 45 degrees. | |
12003 | Apollo 12 | soil >1 cm | 12003 is coarse (>1cm) split from 12001, along with friable material from the bottom of the sample box. This was collected about 30 meters northwest of LM on EVA-1. These broken up fines from larger rocks do not make a statistical sample. | |
12042 | Apollo 12 | 12042 is a surface soil taken on the outer flank of Surveyor crater rim, 50 m NW of Halo crater. The sample area is strewn with cohesive clods or aggregates showing a "wrinkled texture". Perhaps this indicates an area of secondary ejecta. | ||
14148 | Apollo 14 | soil | 14145, 14146, 14147, and 14148 collected from the top of the trench; 14153, 14154, 14155, and 14156 is mixed material from the middle two layers, 14080 and 14081 below that, and 14073, 14074, 14075, 14076, 14077, 14078, and 14079 and 14149, 14150, 14151, and 14152 from the bottom of a 40 cm trench. Astronaut Shepard reports the surface fines were so loose the trench walls kept falling in and layered materials were mixed. Bottom layers have pebble in it. | |
14149 | Apollo 14 | soil | 14145, 14146, 14147, and 14148 collected from the top of the trench; 14153, 14154, 14155, and 14156 is mixed material from the middle two layers, 14080 and 14081 below that, and 14073, 14074, 14075, 14076, 14077, 14078, and 14079 and 14149, 14150, 14151, and 14152 from the bottom of a 40 cm trench. Astronaut Shepard reports the surface fines were so loose the trench walls kept falling in and layered materials were mixed. Bottom layers have pebble in it. | |
14163 | Apollo 14 | soil | 14160, 14161, 14162, 14163, 14402, 14422, 14425 through 14453 collected 15 m NW of LM. Samples collected from the bottom of a 1 m crater with glass in the bottom; Astronaut Shepard identifies the crater as secondary. Sample area is level and free of large blocks. | |
15014 | Apollo 15 | soil-general | 15014 was placed in a special environmental sample container (SESC) which has remained unopened to date (2010). | |
15025 | Apollo 15 | soil-general | breccia | 15025 was included in the collection of the contingency sample for Apollo 15. It is a typical soil breccia. |
15027 | Apollo 15 | breccia | 15027 and 15028 are both glass-coated breccias found together near the LM. | |
15028 | Apollo 15 | breccia | 15027 and 15028 are both glass-coated breccias found together near the LM. | |
15065 | Apollo 15 | basalt | 15065 is a coarse-grained mare basalt that is about 3.35 b.y. old. | |
15075 | Apollo 15 | basalt | 15075 was one of several basalt samples collected as a radial sample near the rim of Elbow Crater (15065 through 15085). They all appear to be similar (Ryder 1985) . 15077 is interpreted as a "sister" sample to 15076. | |
15076 | Apollo 15 | basalt | 15076 is a coarse-grained, porphyritic pigeonite basalt with subophitic matrix. It has been dated at 3.35 b.y. and has been exposed on the lunar surface for ~300 m.y. (Elbow Crater ?). The top surface is rounded with numerous micrometeorite craters. | |
15091 | Apollo 15 | soil | 15091 is a surface soil and should be compared with the top of the double drive tube 15008 collected nearby. | |
15115 | Apollo 15 | rake | basalt | 15115 is a relatively coarse basalt and was collected as a rake sample from station 2, Apollo 15.. |
15116 | Apollo 15 | rake | basalt | 15116 was collected as part of a rake sample from station 2, Apollo 15 (Swann et al. 1972). It is a coarse grained pyroxene-rich mare basalt and has not been dated. |
15119 | Apollo 15 | rake | basalt | 15119 is an olivine-normative mare basalt with a microporphyritic texture. The phenocrysts are small, sparse, and yellow-green olivines. A regolith breccia adheres to the basalt, hence the basalt is actually a clast. The basalt is tough; the regolith breccia is friable and brownish-gray. Zap pits occur on the regolith breccia, and the basalt has a few vugs. |
15205 | Apollo 15 | breccia | 15205 is noteworthy in that it contains a high percentage of KREEP basalt fragments as clasts, but also contains fragments of the mafic green glass, and mare basalt found in the Apollo 15 regolith. 15205 has not been dated, but it has an exposure age of 169 m.y. It has a thin coating of vesicular glass on most surfaces, such that it must have broke free from the boulder along an interior glass vein. Micormeteorite carters on an exposed surface have been carefully studied. | |
15256 | Apollo 15 | rock | breccia | 15256 is a rare type of lunar breccia, made up of mostly mare basalt fragments, that are welded together; is rounded, aphanitic, coherent and covered with micrometeorite craters on most sides. It is made up of fragments of olivine-normative basalt and lacks fragments of pyroxene basalt (the other main variety of Apollo 15 basalt). The sample lacks a signature of meteoritic siderophiles and was not a soil. This rock has not been dated. |
15255 | Apollo 15 | breccia | 15257 is clearly part of 15255 that broke off of during transport. 15255 and 15257 are a coherent breccia with finegrained dark matrix. The texture and high content of rare gas confirms that it was a regolith sample. | |
15300 | Apollo 15 | rake | soil | 15300 was collected at Spur crater at Station 7 to accompany the comprehensive rake sample; 15305 through 15308, and 15315 through 15312. The sample area has moderately abundant small fragments on and near the rim crest of Spur crater. |
15330 | Apollo 15 | rake | breccia | 15306 is a regolith breccia collected as part of a large soil (15300) and rake sample (15310) at Spur Crater. 15315, 15324, 15325 and 15330 are additional large soil breccias from the same rake sample, and there are many smaller fragments from the same sample (Butler 1972; Ryder and Sherman 1989). They all contain green glass spheres, distinctive of the soil and breccias samples at Spur Crater. |
15315 | Apollo 15 | rake | breccia | 15306 is a regolith breccia collected as part of a large soil (15300) and rake sample (15310) at Spur Crater. 15315, 15324, 15325 and 15330 are additional large soil breccias from the same rake sample, and there are many smaller fragments from the same sample (Butler 1972; Ryder and Sherman 1989). They all contain green glass spheres, distinctive of the soil and breccias samples at Spur Crater. |
15324 | Apollo 15 | rake | breccia | 15306 is a regolith breccia collected as part of a large soil (15300) and rake sample (15310) at Spur Crater. 15315, 15324, 15325 and 15330 are additional large soil breccias from the same rake sample, and there are many smaller fragments from the same sample (Butler 1972; Ryder and Sherman 1989). They all contain green glass spheres, distinctive of the soil and breccias samples at Spur Crater. |
15325 | Apollo 15 | rake | breccia | 15306 is a regolith breccia collected as part of a large soil (15300) and rake sample (15310) at Spur Crater. 15315, 15324, 15325 and 15330 are additional large soil breccias from the same rake sample, and there are many smaller fragments from the same sample (Butler 1972; Ryder and Sherman 1989). They all contain green glass spheres, distinctive of the soil and breccias samples at Spur Crater. |
15386 | Apollo 15 | basalt | 15386 is the largest sample of pristine KREEP basalt in the collection. By pristine we mean that it is lacking in meteoritical siderophiles (Ir, Re, Au etc), and hence not contaminated by meteorite debris. Thus it is thought to represent an indogenous lunar volcanic melt derived from the lunar interior (see discussion in 15382). | |
15436 | Apollo 15 | impact melt breccia | 15436 is a vesicular, fine-grained melt which includes mineral grains and lithic fragments. It is a round black and white rock with a chalky white dust covering. | |
15465 | Apollo 15 | breccia | 15465 and 15466 are a collection of breccia fragments cemented together with a vesicular black glass. | |
15466 | Apollo 15 | glassy impact melt breccia | 15465 and 15466 are a collection of breccia fragments cemented together with a vesicular black glass. | |
15485 | Apollo 15 | basalt | 15485 and 15486 are samples of vitrophyric pigeonite basalt, a rapidly cooled variety of quartz-normative basalt found to be rather common at the Apollo 15 site. They are very vesicular with porphyritic, diktytaxitic texture. The age of this boulder is 3.4 b.y. and it has an exposure age of 114 m.y. (determined on 15499). | |
15486 | Apollo 15 | basalt | 15485 and 15486 are samples of vitrophyric pigeonite basalt, a rapidly cooled variety of quartz-normative basalt found to be rather common at the Apollo 15 site. They are very vesicular with porphyritic, diktytaxitic texture. The age of this boulder is 3.4 b.y. and it has an exposure age of 114 m.y. (determined on 15499). | |
15531 | Apollo 15 | 15501 and 15511 were collected from the rim of a small crater at station 9, while 15531 was collected at station 9a (near Hadley Rille). | ||
15506 | Apollo 15 | regolith breccia | 15506 and 15508 are glass-coated pieces of regolith breccia similar to 15505 in the same bag and may be pieces of the larger breccia - see also section on 15501. They have not been studied and there are no thin sections. | |
15508 | Apollo 15 | breccia | 15506 and 15508 are glass-coated pieces of regolith breccia similar to 15505 in the same bag and may be pieces of the larger breccia – see also section on 15501. They have not been studied and there are no thin sections. | |
15507 | Apollo 15 | other | 15507 is made up of three glass particles that fit together as a hollow egg. It has not been subdivided nor studied. There is a zap pit on the interior wall of the large vesicle, proving that it was already broken on the lunar surface (Ryder 1985). | |
15515 | Apollo 15 | regolith breccia | 15515 is brown, very friable, porus and full of glass particles. | |
15530 | Apollo 15 | soil | 15530 was collected with a suite of rocks, fragments, and cores at Station 9A. The soil sample was taken about 20 m east of the rim of Hadley Rille, its exact location has not been identified on the surface photographs. The ground slopes gently from the sample site toward the rim of Hadley Rille; rock fragments on the surface become increasingly abundant as the rille rim is approached. | |
15606 | Apollo 15 | basalt | 15605, 15606 and 15607 are small fragments of Ferich mare basalt collected as >1 cm "walnuts" from largest soil sample 15600. 15605 is coarse-grained, 15606 is medium-grained and 15607 is fine-grained. 15606 is very vesicular. They are all examples of olivine-normative basalt with low silica content and with some olivine. | |
15607 | Apollo 15 | basalt | 15605, 15606 and 15607 are small fragments of Ferich mare basalt collected as >1 cm "walnuts" from largest soil sample 15600. 15605 is coarse-grained, 15606 is medium-grained and 15607 is fine-grained. 15606 is very vesicular. They are all examples of olivine-normative basalt with low silica content and with some olivine. | |
15605 | Apollo 15 | basalt | 15605, 15606 and 15607 are small fragments of Ferich mare basalt collected as >1 cm "walnuts" from largest soil sample 15600. 15605 is coarse-grained, 15606 is medium-grained and 15607 is fine-grained. 15606 is very vesicular. They are all examples of olivine-normative basalt with low silica content and with some olivine. | |
15647 | Apollo 15 | rake | basalt | 15647 is a relatively large, relatively coarse-grained olivine basalt. |
15648 | Apollo 15 | rake | basalt | 15648 is brecciated and partially shock-melted and 15649 may also be shocked. They are members of the olivine-normative clan of Apollo 15 basalts. |
15649 | Apollo 15 | rake | basalt | 15648 is brecciated and partially shock-melted and 15649 may also be shocked. They are members of the olivine-normative clan of Apollo 15 basalts. |
60014 | Apollo 16 | core | 60014 - 60013 is one of the three cores that were collected close to one another (about 50 m apart) at the ALSEP site at Apollo 16 | |
63320 | Apollo 16 | soil | 63320 is probably the fine grained ejecta from North Ray crater. If Shadow Rock was ejected from North Ray crater, these samples have been virtually undisturbed since the North Ray event. | |
63598 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | 63597 and 63598 are extremely porous poikilitic impact melt breccias |
63597 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | 63597 and 63598 are extremely porous poikilitic impact melt breccias |
65560 | Apollo 16 | rake | 65515 to 65574 are a collection of very friable, rounded, brown-colored soil breccias, and have never been studied. | |
65551 | Apollo 16 | rake | 65515 to 65574 are a collection of very friable, rounded, brown-colored soil breccias, and have never been studied. | |
65552 | Apollo 16 | rake | 65515 to 65574 are a collection of very friable, rounded, brown-colored soil breccias, and have never been studied. | |
65553 | Apollo 16 | rake | 65515 to 65574 are a collection of very friable, rounded, brown-colored soil breccias, and have never been studied. | |
65563 | Apollo 16 | rake | 65515 to 65574 are a collection of very friable, rounded, brown-colored soil breccias, and have never been studied. | |
65554 | Apollo 16 | rake | 65515 to 65574 are a collection of very friable, rounded, brown-colored soil breccias, and have never been studied. | |
65555 | Apollo 16 | rake | 65515 to 65574 are a collection of very friable, rounded, brown-colored soil breccias, and have never been studied. | |
65556 | Apollo 16 | rake | 65515 to 65574 are a collection of very friable, rounded, brown-colored soil breccias, and have never been studied. | |
65574 | Apollo 16 | rake | 65515 to 65574 are a collection of very friable, rounded, brown-colored soil breccias, and have never been studied. | |
65573 | Apollo 16 | rake | 65515 to 65574 are a collection of very friable, rounded, brown-colored soil breccias, and have never been studied. | |
65572 | Apollo 16 | rake | 65515 to 65574 are a collection of very friable, rounded, brown-colored soil breccias, and have never been studied. | |
65571 | Apollo 16 | rake | 65515 to 65574 are a collection of very friable, rounded, brown-colored soil breccias, and have never been studied. | |
65570 | Apollo 16 | rake | 65515 to 65574 are a collection of very friable, rounded, brown-colored soil breccias, and have never been studied. | |
65569 | Apollo 16 | rake | 65515 to 65574 are a collection of very friable, rounded, brown-colored soil breccias, and have never been studied. | |
65568 | Apollo 16 | rake | 65515 to 65574 are a collection of very friable, rounded, brown-colored soil breccias, and have never been studied. | |
65557 | Apollo 16 | rake | 65515 to 65574 are a collection of very friable, rounded, brown-colored soil breccias, and have never been studied. | |
65515 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | 65515 to 65574 are a collection of very friable, rounded, brown-colored soil breccias, and have never been studied. |
65516 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | 65515 to 65574 are a collection of very friable, rounded, brown-colored soil breccias, and have never been studied. |
65517 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | 65515 to 65574 are a collection of very friable, rounded, brown-colored soil breccias, and have never been studied. |
65523 | Apollo 16 | rake | 65515 to 65574 are a collection of very friable, rounded, brown-colored soil breccias, and have never been studied. | |
65524 | Apollo 16 | rake | 65515 to 65574 are a collection of very friable, rounded, brown-colored soil breccias, and have never been studied. | |
65564 | Apollo 16 | rake | 65515 to 65574 are a collection of very friable, rounded, brown-colored soil breccias, and have never been studied. | |
65525 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | 65515 to 65574 are a collection of very friable, rounded, brown-colored soil breccias, and have never been studied. |
65526 | Apollo 16 | rake | 65515 to 65574 are a collection of very friable, rounded, brown-colored soil breccias, and have never been studied. | |
65527 | Apollo 16 | rake | 65515 to 65574 are a collection of very friable, rounded, brown-colored soil breccias, and have never been studied. | |
65528 | Apollo 16 | rake | 65515 to 65574 are a collection of very friable, rounded, brown-colored soil breccias, and have never been studied. | |
65529 | Apollo 16 | rake | 65515 to 65574 are a collection of very friable, rounded, brown-colored soil breccias, and have never been studied. | |
65550 | Apollo 16 | rake | 65515 to 65574 are a collection of very friable, rounded, brown-colored soil breccias, and have never been studied. | |
65530 | Apollo 16 | rake | 65515 to 65574 are a collection of very friable, rounded, brown-colored soil breccias, and have never been studied. | |
65567 | Apollo 16 | rake | 65515 to 65574 are a collection of very friable, rounded, brown-colored soil breccias, and have never been studied. | |
65549 | Apollo 16 | rake | 65515 to 65574 are a collection of very friable, rounded, brown-colored soil breccias, and have never been studied. | |
65548 | Apollo 16 | rake | 65515 to 65574 are a collection of very friable, rounded, brown-colored soil breccias, and have never been studied. | |
65531 | Apollo 16 | rake | 65515 to 65574 are a collection of very friable, rounded, brown-colored soil breccias, and have never been studied. | |
65547 | Apollo 16 | rake | 65515 to 65574 are a collection of very friable, rounded, brown-colored soil breccias, and have never been studied. | |
65532 | Apollo 16 | rake | 65515 to 65574 are a collection of very friable, rounded, brown-colored soil breccias, and have never been studied. | |
65546 | Apollo 16 | rake | 65515 to 65574 are a collection of very friable, rounded, brown-colored soil breccias, and have never been studied. | |
65533 | Apollo 16 | rake | 65515 to 65574 are a collection of very friable, rounded, brown-colored soil breccias, and have never been studied. | |
65534 | Apollo 16 | rake | 65515 to 65574 are a collection of very friable, rounded, brown-colored soil breccias, and have never been studied. | |
65535 | Apollo 16 | rake | 65515 to 65574 are a collection of very friable, rounded, brown-colored soil breccias, and have never been studied. | |
65545 | Apollo 16 | rake | 65515 to 65574 are a collection of very friable, rounded, brown-colored soil breccias, and have never been studied. | |
65566 | Apollo 16 | rake | 65515 to 65574 are a collection of very friable, rounded, brown-colored soil breccias, and have never been studied. | |
65536 | Apollo 16 | rake | 65515 to 65574 are a collection of very friable, rounded, brown-colored soil breccias, and have never been studied. | |
65562 | Apollo 16 | rake | 65515 to 65574 are a collection of very friable, rounded, brown-colored soil breccias, and have never been studied. | |
65537 | Apollo 16 | rake | 65515 to 65574 are a collection of very friable, rounded, brown-colored soil breccias, and have never been studied. | |
65538 | Apollo 16 | rake | 65515 to 65574 are a collection of very friable, rounded, brown-colored soil breccias, and have never been studied. | |
65565 | Apollo 16 | rake | 65515 to 65574 are a collection of very friable, rounded, brown-colored soil breccias, and have never been studied. | |
65539 | Apollo 16 | rake | 65515 to 65574 are a collection of very friable, rounded, brown-colored soil breccias, and have never been studied. | |
65561 | Apollo 16 | rake | 65515 to 65574 are a collection of very friable, rounded, brown-colored soil breccias, and have never been studied. | |
65559 | Apollo 16 | rake | 65515 to 65574 are a collection of very friable, rounded, brown-colored soil breccias, and have never been studied. | |
65540 | Apollo 16 | rake | 65515 to 65574 are a collection of very friable, rounded, brown-colored soil breccias, and have never been studied. | |
65541 | Apollo 16 | rake | 65515 to 65574 are a collection of very friable, rounded, brown-colored soil breccias, and have never been studied. | |
65542 | Apollo 16 | rake | 65515 to 65574 are a collection of very friable, rounded, brown-colored soil breccias, and have never been studied. | |
65543 | Apollo 16 | rake | 65515 to 65574 are a collection of very friable, rounded, brown-colored soil breccias, and have never been studied. | |
65544 | Apollo 16 | rake | 65515 to 65574 are a collection of very friable, rounded, brown-colored soil breccias, and have never been studied. | |
65518 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | 65515 to 65574 are a collection of very friable, rounded, brown-colored soil breccias, and have never been studied. |
65519 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | 65515 to 65574 are a collection of very friable, rounded, brown-colored soil breccias, and have never been studied. |
65520 | Apollo 16 | rake | 65515 to 65574 are a collection of very friable, rounded, brown-colored soil breccias, and have never been studied. | |
65558 | Apollo 16 | rake | 65515 to 65574 are a collection of very friable, rounded, brown-colored soil breccias, and have never been studied. | |
65521 | Apollo 16 | rake | 65515 to 65574 are a collection of very friable, rounded, brown-colored soil breccias, and have never been studied. | |
65522 | Apollo 16 | rake | 65515 to 65574 are a collection of very friable, rounded, brown-colored soil breccias, and have never been studied. | |
65700 | Apollo 16 | rake | soil | 65700 and 65900 are surface soils to accompany the rake samples at Station 5. The sample area has a mostly sandy surface with no large blocks nearby. Fines in the area are extremely loose. |
65920 | Apollo 16 | rake | 65920 is the residue from a rake sample at the same location. | |
66030 | Apollo 16 | soil | 66030 is a soil collected with an 8 cm breccia. It is supposed that the breccia is local ejecta, but the source crater is not obvious. | |
67016 | Apollo 16 | breccia | 67016 is a feldspathic fragmental breccia with both light and dark clasts, and is 3.95 b.y. old with an exposure age of 50 m.y. | |
67235 | Apollo 16 | impact melt breccia | 67235 is a large special sample that was collected to study the outer surface of a lunar rock. | |
67687 | Apollo 16 | breccia | 67628 was renumbered by Ryder and Norman (1980) when they made the catalog. It is a collection of four "glass bombs" that were collected as rake samples from just inside the rim of North Ray Crater. 67628 was originally cataloged as 4 glass particles, but Ryder and Norman (1980) treated them as separate particles - so they were renumbered. | |
67688 | Apollo 16 | breccia | 67628 was renumbered by Ryder and Norman (1980) when they made the catalog. It is a collection of four "glass bombs" that were collected as rake samples from just inside the rim of North Ray Crater. 67628 was originally cataloged as 4 glass particles, but Ryder and Norman (1980) treated them as separate particles - so they were renumbered. | |
67685 | Apollo 16 | breccia | 67628 was renumbered by Ryder and Norman (1980) when they made the catalog. It is a collection of four "glass bombs" that were collected as rake samples from just inside the rim of North Ray Crater. 67628 was originally cataloged as 4 glass particles, but Ryder and Norman (1980) treated them as separate particles - so they were renumbered. | |
67686 | Apollo 16 | breccia | 67628 was renumbered by Ryder and Norman (1980) when they made the catalog. It is a collection of four "glass bombs" that were collected as rake samples from just inside the rim of North Ray Crater. 67628 was originally cataloged as 4 glass particles, but Ryder and Norman (1980) treated them as separate particles - so they were renumbered. | |
68415 | Apollo 16 | impact melt breccia | 68415 and 68416 have an igneous has an intersertal texture characterized by a "fret work" of plagioclase laths with interstitial olivine and pyroxene and minor occurances of opaques, phosphates, residual glass and other minerals; is 3.76 b.y. | |
69940 | Apollo 16 | soil | 69940 is a "scoop" sample from several cm below the surface. Large fragments are relatively sparse at the sample site, surface is relatively firm, craters 5-30 cm are common but larger ones are sparse. | |
69960 | Apollo 16 | soil | 69960 was collected at Station 9 from under a .5 meter boulder after it had been rolled over. It is part of a "surface sampler" including soils 69920, 69940, and 69960 and fragments 69003, 69004, and 66935. Large fragments are relatively sparse at the sample site, surface is relatively firm, craters 5-30 cm are common but larger ones are sparse. | |
70008 | Apollo 17 | core | soil | 70001-70009 are the segments of the deep core drilled at the ALSEP site 180 meters west of the LM. The sample area is flat, level and has 2-3% block cover. Craters 10 cm to 1 meter in size are common, fines are coherent below 3-4 cm. Drill penetration to 3.2 meters alternated between easy and difficult. The bottom 20 cm were very difficult to drill. The base material is cohesive, fragmental. |
71040 | Apollo 17 | soil | 71040 is a surface soil that was collected along with 6 chips in the shadow of "tombstone rock" at Station 1A. Soil 71060 was collected at the same site at a depth of 5-6 cm. Tombstone Rock is on the inner side of the southwest rim of a 10 meter blocky crater. The sample area is broadly rolling and dominated by ejecta. Local craters up to 2 meters in size are common, and the fines are fairly compact. | |
71060 | Apollo 17 | soil | 71060 is a soil sample collected 5-6 cm below the surface in the shadow of "tombstone rock" at Station 1A. It was collected with 13 chips. Tombstone Rock is on the inner side of the southwest rim of a 10 meter blocky crater. The sample area is broadly rolling and dominated by ejecta. Local craters up to 2 meters in size are common, and the fines are faily compact. | |
72320 | Apollo 17 | soil | 72320 was collected at Station 2, near the base of the South Massif. This "shadowed soil" collected about 20 cm under the east - west overhang of a 2 meter diameter boulder. The sample area is a strewn boulder field with boulders up to 2 meters across common. Craters up to 10 cm are abundant in the immediate sample area. The soil probably does not have as complex an exposure history as rake sample 72500 because of the protection from the rock overhang. | |
72460 | Apollo 17 | soil | 72460 was collected at Station 2, near the base of South Massif. It was a skim sample which was collected from under a .7 meter breccia boulder which was rolled over by the crew. 72440 was from the upper 4 cm of the soil, and 72460 was a skim sample. The area was too disturbed after rolling the boulder over to compare well with the undisturbed fines, but generally it appears similar. The sample area is a strewn boulder field with loose fines. | |
79240 | Apollo 17 | soil | 79220 is part of a trench sequence (79220 depth 0-2cm, 79240 depth 2-7 cm, 79260 depth 7-17 cm) taken from the southwest flank of the Van Serg crater ejecta blanket near Station 9. The uppermost 7 cm of the trench is gray, below that is a light gray or white layer. The site has a gently southeast slope away from Van Serg crater. Fragments 2-20 cm cover 3% of the surface. Two fresh 1 meter craters are found near the trench. | |
79260 | Apollo 17 | soil | 79220 is part of a trench sequence (79220 depth 0-2cm, 79240 depth 2-7 cm, 79260 depth 7-17 cm) taken from the southwest flank of the Van Serg crater ejecta blanket near Station 9. The uppermost 7 cm of the trench is gray, below that is a light gray or white layer. The site has a gently southeast slope away from Van Serg crater. Fragments 2-20 cm cover 3% of the surface. Two fresh 1 meter craters are found near the trench. | |
79220 | Apollo 17 | soil | 79220 is part of a trench sequence (79220 depth 0-2cm, 79240 depth 2-7 cm, 79260 depth 7-17 cm) taken from the southwest flank of the Van Serg crater ejecta blanket near Station 9. The uppermost 7 cm of the trench is gray, below that is a light gray or white layer. The site has a gently southeast slope away from Van Serg crater. Fragments 2-20 cm cover 3% of the surface. Two fresh 1 meter craters are found near the trench. | |
65315 | Apollo 16 | rake | anorthite | about 8 cm across; abundant micrometeorite pits and patina on this surface; |
67718 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | abundant clasts of plagioclase set in an aphanitic matrix |
67719 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | abundant clasts of plagioclase set in an aphanitic matrix |
67415 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | According to Lindstrom and Lindstrom (1986), 67415 is a lightly-shocked, granulitic breccia with a cataclastic matrix. |
15105 | Apollo 15 | basalt | According to Swann et al. (1972), lunar basalt 15105 as a small rock (peanut) collected with soil from station 2 at Apollo 15. It is a fine-grained, olivine-normative mare basalt with relic olivine phenocrysts | |
15498 | Apollo 15 | rock | regolith breccia | A coherent, glassy matrix breccia with components mainly of mare derivation, including basalt fragments and glass. |
63587 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | a coherent impact melt breccia with a poikilitic texture and numerous clasts and has numerous micrometeorite craters on its surface |
65786 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | a coherent, medium grey, polymict breccia with abundant glass in the matrix |
67766 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | a coherent, plagioclase-rich breccia with a granular matrix. It has a measured age of 3.82 b.y. |
15287 | Apollo 15 | breccia | a coherent regolith breccia with zap pits on one side. It is porous, with abundant glass particles including green glass. Lithic clasts include mare basalt and KREEP basalt. | |
60215 | Apollo 16 | breccia | actually a polymict breccia, the largest portion is almost pure white and very plagioclase rich. The anorthositic portion is both highly shocked and cataclastic. | |
15598 | Apollo 15 | basalt | a fine-grained, olivine-phyric basalt consisting of scattered olivine phenocrysts 0.6 to 1.3 mm across, set in an intergranular matrix of plagioclase, pyroxene, and opaques | |
15595 | Apollo 15 | basalt | a finegrained, porphyritic mare basalt with conspicuously irregularly distributed vugs | |
15596 | Apollo 15 | basalt | a finegrained, porphyritic mare basalt with conspicuously irregularly distributed vugs. 15596 has the same texture but with somewhat larger pyroxenes, and a groundmass that is more crystalline. | |
63578 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | a fragmental breccia with at least some glass in the matrix |
60016 | Apollo 16 | fragmental breccia | a friable breccia disaggregated with 1362 freeze - thaw cycles; surface is relatively unpitted and smooth. | |
67556 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | a friable micropoikilitic impact melt with intrusive glass veins. It has a micrometeorite crater. |
60075 | Apollo 16 | fragmental breccia | a friable, porous, feldspathic breccia. It has not been well-studied. | |
78525 | Apollo 17 | rake | other | Agglutinate |
76285 | Apollo 17 | rock | breccia | Agglutinate of Dark Matrix Breccia Fragments; soil in area was collected as comparison with 76245, which was permanently shadowed. |
67095 | Apollo 16 | impact melt breccia | a glass-coated basaltic impact melt or "bomb" that has not been dated. | |
65055 | Apollo 16 | rock | impact melt breccia | aluminous, basaltic impact melt, is coherent and appears to be homogeneous throughout, and has been determined to be 3.96 b.y old by the Ar/Ar plateau technique |
64817 | Apollo 16 | rake | basalt | aluminous basalt with prominent plagioclase laths and an age of 3.84 b.y. |
15651 | Apollo 15 | rake | basalt | a medium-grained olivine-bearing mare basalt with microgabbroic texture |
64536 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | a mix of cataclastic ferroan anorthosite with impact melt. In some cases they also have a thick black glass coating |
61135 | Apollo 16 | regolith breccia | an ancient regolith breccia that became a closed system about 3.9 b.y. ago; and has a few zap pits | |
60629 | Apollo 16 | rake | an anorthosite with attached black glass, cataclastic texture and the pyroxenes indicate that this sample is ferroan anorthosite | |
10064 | Apollo 11 | rock | breccia | Angular, dark to light grey, highly devitrified fine breccia with high glass clast content |
10074 | Apollo 11 | rock | breccia | Angular, medium dark grey, partly devitrified microbreccia with low lithic clast content |
10056 | Apollo 11 | rock | breccia | Angular to sub-angular, medium dark grey microbreccia |
66080 | Apollo 16 | soil | an indurated clod of white impact ejecta; possibly from South Ray crater. | |
15415 | Apollo 15 | rock | anorthite | Anorthite. Corse-grained, ferroan crystalline rock with complex cataclastic and metamorphic history. Pale, blocky, angular to subrounded sample, which was originally partly dust-covered. |
74245 | Apollo 17 | rock | basalt | Aphanitic High-Ti Basalt |
76539 | Apollo 17 | rake | high-Ti mare basalt | Aphanitic High-Ti Mare Basalt |
76568 | Apollo 17 | rake | high-Ti mare basalt | Aphanitic High-Ti Mare Basalt |
72255 | Apollo 17 | rock | impact melt breccia | aphanitic impact melt breccia |
72215 | Apollo 17 | rock | impact melt breccia | aphanitic impact melt breccia |
76569 | Apollo 17 | rake | impact melt breccia | Aphanitic Impact Melt Breccia |
73255 | Apollo 17 | rock | impact melt breccia | Aphanitic Impact Melt Breccia, essentally an agglomeritic bomb with abundant clasts |
73215 | Apollo 17 | rock | impact melt breccia | Aphanitic Impact Melt Breccia, polymict breccia, |
72235 | Apollo 17 | rock | impact melt breccia | aphanitic impact melt breccia, sample was given name "Dying Dog" during processing, contains plutonic KREEP norite |
73235 | Apollo 17 | rock | impact melt breccia | Aphanitic Impact Melt Brecia, medium light gray (N6) with mottling |
15388 | Apollo 15 | basalt | a pigeonite basalt with long pyroxene crystals. It has not been dated. | |
69935 | Apollo 16 | breccia | apparently a polymict breccia that is texturally inhomogeneous and has a large white clast | |
62235 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | apparently homogeneous, coherent, hollocrystaline impact melt rock with classic poikilitic texture highly enriched in trace elements and siderophile elements and has been dated at 3.88 b.y., with an exposure history of 153 m.y. |
68525 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | appears to be impact melt breccia, with poikilitic texture, but have not been studied. |
68527 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | appears to be impact melt breccia, with poikilitic texture, but have not been studied. |
68526 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | appears to be impact melt breccia, with poikilitic texture, but have not been studied. |
69945 | Apollo 16 | breccia | appears to be more mafic than most poikilitic Apollo 16 breccias and has only minor clasts | |
65710 | Apollo 16 | rake | soil | appears to be soil and rake residue from samples 65501, 65601 and 65701. |
65787 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | appears to have a ribbon of glass interior |
63500 | Apollo 16 | rake | soil | area contains small rocks (2-10 cm) which cover 5% of the surface, fines are less compacted than soil at North Ray crater. Random 1-2 meter fresh to subdued craters are found in the local area. No crater is recognizable in the immediate sample area. |
67946 | Apollo 16 | breccia | are glass (?) particles with zaps | |
69955 | Apollo 16 | rock | anorthite | a rock that is relatively coarse-grained, shocked cataclastic anorthosite with a flat black glass vein running the length |
61528 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | As sorted and described by Phinney et al. (1973) they may all be the same material. Only 61525 has been studied. |
61527 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | As sorted and described by Phinney et al. (1973) they may all be the same material. Only 61525 has been studied. |
61526 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | As sorted and described by Phinney et al. (1973) they may all be the same material. Only 61525 has been studied. |
61529 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | As sorted and described by Phinney et al. (1973) they may all be the same material. Only 61525 has been studied. |
67475 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | a tough purplish-grey, glassy breccia |
15636 | Apollo 15 | rake | basalt | At over 300 grams it is the largest of the rake samples. It is a coarse-grained olivine-normative basalt rather typical of Apollo 15. It has not been dated. |
15030 | Apollo 15 | soil-general | At Station 8, Astronaut Irwin dug the deep trench; samples 15030 through 15034 were taken from the bottom of the trench. The trench area is similar to the area near the ALSEP, a smooth, hummocky surface of fine grained material with rare, cobble sized fragments not visibly related to any particular crater. The trench wall was described by the astronauts as uniform, with perhaps a slight color darkening in the middle part, above a hard layer which was not penetrated, but just reached at a depth of about 35 cm. | |
15040 | Apollo 15 | soil-general | At Station 8 Astronaut Irwin dug the deep trench; samples 15040 through 15044 were taken from the tope of the trench. The trench area is similar to the area near the ALSEP, a smooth, hummocky surface of fine grained material with rare, cobble sized fragments not visibly related to any particular crater. The trench wall was described by the astronauts as uniform, with perhaps a slight color darkening in the middle part, above a hard layer which was not penetrated, but just reached at a depth of about 35 cm. One small fresh crater occurs a few meters north of the trench, but it is too distant to add a significant layer of ejecta to the top of the trench area. | |
65900 | Apollo 16 | soil | a very mature soil with average grain size of 85 microns | |
67947 | Apollo 16 | breccia | a "walnut" from soil 67941; Granulitic Breccia | |
76255 | Apollo 17 | rock | impact melt breccia | Banded Impact Melt Breccia; has large clast of crushed norite |
78528 | Apollo 17 | basalt | Basalt | |
72155 | Apollo 17 | rock | basalt | Basalt |
15265 | Apollo 15 | regolith breccia | Basalt fragment colected from the rim of a 12m, subdued crater at Station 6, the furthest point east sampled on the Appennine front during this mission. This basalt fragment is probaby exotic. Fragment was disaggregated with 4480 cycles of freeze/thaw and sonic disaggregation. | |
60615 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | basaltic impact melt with one large vesicle; coherent, mostly intergranular with olivine and pyroxene confined to intersticies between fine plagioclase laths |
65795 | Apollo 16 | rake | basalt | basaltic texture, is highly aluminous; has been dated at 3.81 b.y. |
67055 | Apollo 16 | rock | breccia | black and white breccia; high trace element content, but has not been dated. |
62295 | Apollo 16 | rake | impact melt breccia | blocky coherent impact melt rock with numerous micrometeorite pits on one side and none on the other |
67697 | Apollo 16 | breccia | Borchardt et al. (1985) and Stoffler et al. (1985) studied glass particles from North Ray Crater and labeled these particles "glass bombs". 67629 was originally 4 pieces, which have since been relabeled 67629, 67695, 67696 and 67697 | |
67696 | Apollo 16 | breccia | Borchardt et al. (1985) and Stoffler et al. (1985) studied glass particles from North Ray Crater and labeled these particles "glass bombs". 67629 was originally 4 pieces, which have since been relabeled 67629, 67695, 67696 and 67697 | |
67695 | Apollo 16 | breccia | Borchardt et al. (1985) and Stoffler et al. (1985) studied glass particles from North Ray Crater and labeled these particles "glass bombs". 67629 was originally 4 pieces, which have since been relabeled 67629, 67695, 67696 and 67697 | |
78568 | Apollo 17 | rake | breccia | Breccia, coherent soil breccia |
79195 | Apollo 17 | rock | breccia | Breccia, friable, basalt |
14307 | Apollo 14 | rock | breccia | Breccia sample 14307 was collected during the second EVA at station G. This sample was not well-documented because its position had already been changed by the time it was collected. There are no lunar surface photographs of 14307, and its lunar orientation is only known through surface pitting. The rock was placed in documented bag 25N and returned to weigh bag 1031. This is a block, subrounded rock with an irregular surface. The color varies from white to dark gray. The rock is friable, but suffieciently strong to prevent clasts from falling out. |
14311 | Apollo 14 | rock | breccia | Breccia sample 14311 was collected during EVA 2 at station Dg. Lunar surface photographs were not taken and the orientation is estimated from surface pitting. Sample 14308 consisted of 3 pieces which PET found to have been part of 14311 and are included herein. These three pieces were renumbered 14311,26; 14311,64; and 14311,65. This sample is a gray coherent breccia which is broken into pieces along fractures. There are only a few fragments >1 mm (<5%) and the rock is mostly (95%) crystalline matrix. |
14313 | Apollo 14 | rock | breccia | Breccia sample 14313 was collected during the second EVA at Station G1, 150 m east of LM, on north rim crest of North Triplet Crater. It was placed in documented bag 27N. Its lunar location and orientation are well documented. This is a medium light gray, coherent, fragmental breccia with a distrinctive shape due to a prominent notch produced by spalling along two sets of fractures intersecting at an angle of 150 degrees. |
14317 | Apollo 14 | rock | breccia | Breccia sample 14317 was collected at Station H during the second EVA but has not been identified in the North Boulder Field photographs, so its lunar location is tentative, and lunar orientation, unknown. It was returned in weigh bag 1038. This rock is a medium gray, coherent breccia. |
14318 | Apollo 14 | rock | breccia | Breccia sample 14318 was collected from the regolith near the south end of North Boulder Field at Station H during the second EVA. It was returned in weigh bag 1038. Sample 14318 is one of the specimens chosen for study by the Imbrium Consortium, who received 14318,0. A complete set of matched thin sections, across the entire specimen was made by the Consortium (1976); This sample is a very coherent, gray, polymict breccia consisting of light gray clasts in a medium gray matrix. |
14319 | Apollo 14 | rock | breccia | Breccia sample 14319 is the western rock from the top of Turtle Rock ("turtle eggs"). This sample as well as 14312 were collected from Turtle Rock at Station H during the second EVA and returned in weigh bag 1038. Its lunar orientation and location have been well documented. It appears to be similar to Turtle Rock and the other rocks in the area. This is alight-medium gray coherent breccia which is flat on one side and rounded on the other side. |
14305 | Apollo 14 | rock | breccia | broken apart during transit to LRL and numberd 14305 / 14302 and 14303 / 14304; sample 14302 was later renumbered 14305,18. The sample is a medium gray, holocrystalline, clast rich breccia which has been well-sintered together. |
67529 | Apollo 16 | rake | cataclastic anorthosite | |
72418 | Apollo 17 | rock | dunite | Cataclastic Dunite, has never been dissected or allocated for study |
72416 | Apollo 17 | rock | dunite | Cataclastic Dunite, has never been dissected or allocated for study |
72415 | Apollo 17 | rock | dunite | Cataclastic dunite, homogeneous |
72417 | Apollo 17 | rock | dunite | Cataclastic Dunite, pale yellowish to greenish gray (5Y 8/1 to 5 GY 8/1) |
77215 | Apollo 17 | rock | norite | Cataclastic Norite (41 or more pieces) |
77077 | Apollo 17 | rock | norite | Cataclastic Norite with Black Veinlets |
76335 | Apollo 17 | rock | troctolite | Cataclastic Troctolite |
73146 | Apollo 17 | rock | anorthite | Cataclastic Troctolitic Anorthosite, very light gray (N8), homogenous |
65095 | Apollo 16 | breccia | "chalky white chunk" neatly tucked between the regolith breccia and the black glass coat; friable white matrix with large grey breccia clasts | |
64558 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | chalky white portion and a dark aphanitic portion characteristic of the light and dark lithologies |
64539 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | chalky white portion and a dark aphanitic portion characteristic of the light and dark lithologies |
64545 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | chalky white portion and a dark aphanitic portion characteristic of the light and dark lithologies |
64546 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | chalky white portion and a dark aphanitic portion characteristic of the light and dark lithologies |
64547 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | chalky white portion and a dark aphanitic portion characteristic of the light and dark lithologies |
64549 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | chalky white portion and a dark aphanitic portion characteristic of the light and dark lithologies |
64555 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | chalky white portion and a dark aphanitic portion characteristic of the light and dark lithologies |
64556 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | chalky white portion and a dark aphanitic portion characteristic of the light and dark lithologies |
64557 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | chalky white portion and a dark aphanitic portion characteristic of the light and dark lithologies |
65789 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | chalky white rake sample |
62237 | Apollo 16 | rock | anorthite | chalky white rock |
15630 | Apollo 15 | rake | basalt | chemical composition is that of an olivine-normative basalt, but olivine does not form obvious phenocrysts. |
15614 | Apollo 15 | rake | basalt | chemical composition is that of an olivine-normative basalt, but olivine does not form obvious phenocrysts. |
15622 | Apollo 15 | rake | basalt | chemical composition is that of an olivine-normative basalt, but olivine does not form obvious phenocrysts. |
67461 | Apollo 16 | soil | chosen as a "reference soil" for the "lunar highland initiative" and is not greatly different from other soil samples from North Ray Crater | |
63567 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | chunks of dark, vesicular glass with white inclusions |
63576 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | chunks of dark, vesicular glass with white inclusions |
63568 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | chunks of dark, vesicular glass with white inclusions |
63565 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | chunks of dark, vesicular glass with white inclusions |
63559 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | chunks of dark, vesicular glass with white inclusions |
15405 | Apollo 15 | rock | breccia | clast-bearing impact-melt rock with a crystalline matrix made up of fine-grained intergrown pyroxene, plagioclase and ilmenite laths (figure 6). Prominent clasts include mineral fragments of plagioclase and pyroxene, along with lithic clasts of KREEP basalt, granite and quartz monzodiorite (QMD). Flow banding in the matrix includes small irregularly-shaped vugs. |
70018 | Apollo 17 | rock | breccia | Clastic Matrix Breccia; no research has been conducted upon this sample |
61155 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | clastrich "glassy impact melt"; has abundant white clasts, thin glass veins and glassy mesostasis |
70147 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | Clast-Rich Impact Melt |
60636 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | clast-rich impact melt, has one of the highest contents of trace elements in the Apollo 16 collection, and has been dated at 3.94 b.y. |
79227 | Apollo 17 | soil | Clod; after separation from the soil sample, this sample disaggregated to soil-like material and was not described | |
79228 | Apollo 17 | soil | Clod; After separation from the soil sample, this sample disaggregated to soil-like material and was not described. | |
68841 | Apollo 16 | soil | coarse fine | |
15471 | Apollo 15 | soil | coarse fine particles | |
67610 | Apollo 16 | rake | soil | coarse-fine particles |
67710 | Apollo 16 | rake | soil | coarse-fine particles |
60610 | Apollo 16 | rake | soil | coarse-fine particles, contained 33 fragments larger than 1 cm |
15291 | Apollo 15 | soil | coarse-fine particles; The grain size distribution indicates that some fragments may have broken off of the large rock. | |
60025 | Apollo 16 | rock | anorthite | Coarse-grained, moderately shocked, pristine cataclastic ferroan anorthosite |
61015 | Apollo 16 | breccia | coated with black glass on one side and is thought to be ejecta from South Ray Crater | |
65358 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | coherent, but it is angular and more aluminous |
65778 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | coherent crystalline impact melt breccia with poikilitic texture |
65777 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | coherent crystalline impact melt breccia with poikilitic texture; has be dated at 3.7 b.y. |
60255 | Apollo 16 | rock | breccia | coherent, dark-matrix soil breccia with abundant white clasts, partially coated with a frothy black glass and has few micrometeorite craters. |
61549 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | coherent dense impact melt with microlites of mafic minerals in aphanitic matrix |
67715 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | coherent, fine-grained impact melt rock |
67716 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | coherent, fine-grained impact melt rock; reported to have pink spinel as a large clast and is probably more aluminous |
15015 | Apollo 15 | rock | regolith breccia | Coherent, glassy matrix breccia containing abundant glass balls, shards, and schlieren |
68846 | Apollo 16 | breccia | coherent, grey, aphanitic rocks | |
68847 | Apollo 16 | breccia | coherent, grey, aphanitic rocks | |
68845 | Apollo 16 | breccia | coherent, grey, aphanitic rocks | |
61569 | Apollo 16 | rake | impact melt breccia | coherent impact melt breccia; appears to be different from most pokilitic melt rocks at Apollo 16 because the dominant oikocryst is olivine, rather than pyroxene |
60235 | Apollo 16 | rock | basalt | coherent impact melt rock with a mostly basaltic texture; there are micrometeorite craters on all sides and some vesicles are obvious; otherwise, it has not been studied. |
63545 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | coherent impact melt rock with numerous zap pits; has been dated at 3.9 b.y. |
60019 | Apollo 16 | rock | breccia | coherent, medium-gray glassy breccia containing several large, light colored clasts |
61195 | Apollo 16 | breccia | coherent, medium grey breccia with a glassy matrix and abundant clasts; zap pits are surrounded with wide spall zones | |
60015 | Apollo 16 | rock | anorthite | Coherent, very light gray, shock-melted and cataclastic anorthosite; largely coated with vesicular glass up to 1 cm thick |
15410 | Apollo 15 | soil | Collected at Station 7 from the summit of the subdued rim crest of Spur Crater. Local surface is moderately well populated with rock fragments up to tens of centimeters across. The sample area is characterized however by the abundance of less than 1 cm size fragments. Several large fragments in the sample have been excluded from the grain size analysis. | |
15500 | Apollo 15 | soil | Collected at Station 9, Scarp crater. This surface sample was collected 10 m from the rim of a 10 meter diameter fresh crater. The surface is saturated with "raindrop depressions" and fragments less than 1 cm in diameter. | |
15117 | Apollo 15 | rake | basalt | Collected by rake as part of a comprehensive sample taken at station 2, Apollo 15 (near St. George Crater and the Hadley Rille); a coarse-grained pigeonite basalt similar to 15115 and 15116. It has been dated at 3.35 ± 0.04 b.y. |
66081 | Apollo 16 | rake | soil | collected from a small subdued crater on the Cayley Plain near Stone Mountain |
64566 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | complex mix of glass and impact melt |
66055 | Apollo 16 | rock | breccia | complex polymict feldspathic breccia that appears to be intermediate between fragmental breccias and glassy melt breccias, with included abundant rounded patches of brown glass; is ~3.9 b.y. old, with an exposure to cosmic rays for 55 m.y. |
67915 | Apollo 16 | rock | breccia | composed of white and grey breccias; both are polymict (Taylor and Mosie 1979), cemented by shock-melted glass and is also cut with thin black glass veins. |
74220 | Apollo 17 | soil | Considered to be a clod of friable material taken 6-8 cm deep in a trench from Station 4, on the rim of 120 meter Shorty crater. The site is near the low place in the crater rim crest. The fragments population is highly variable, craters up to several meters in diameter are common. The particles larger than 1 mm are mostly friable clumps that disagregated during sieving. Any discontinuity is probably due to the fact that the sizes <1 mm were sieved and the sizes >1 mm were hand picked. | |
15608 | Apollo 15 | rake | basalt | consists of numerous skeletal pigeonite mcirophenocrysts in a finer-grained variolitic groundmass of pyroxene, plagioclase and opaque minerals |
61224 | Apollo 16 | rake | basalt | contained several white and off-white particles as well as 3 peppered black and white rock fragments that appeared to fit together as one |
65785 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | contains a coarse-grained pink spinel troctolite clast in a crystalline feldspathic impact melt rock; has been dated at 3.97 b.y. by one group and 3.83 b.y. by another. |
61175 | Apollo 16 | rock | fragmental breccia | contains a high percentage of glass, with some agglutinate. It also contains a small, but significant, mare component. |
61536 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | contains a large white clast held within a glass matrix, and has a thin glass coating on surface |
60665 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | contains chalky white clasts loosely held by black vesicular glass; cataclastic anorthosite |
60050 | Apollo 16 | rake | soil | contains friable white breccias described by the crew as "caliche - like", and contains abundant fragments <15cm. |
67545 | Apollo 16 | rake | contains unusual clasts, some with abundant melt, some with abundant Fe-rich olivine and ferro-augite; zap pits on the outer surfaces | |
64001 | Apollo 16 | core | soil | Core drilled on Stone Mountain at Station 4, within one crater diameter of a 15 meter subdued doublet crater. The deep sections of the core may contain the best samples of typical Descartes material. The sample area has a 10-15 degree slope to the northwest. There are a few scattered cobbles 5-10 cm. Scattered craters .5 to several meters in diameter are common in the general area, there is a .5 meter crater just southwest of the drive tube. |
76536 | Apollo 17 | rake | troctolite | Crushed Troctolite |
67485 | Apollo 16 | rake | impact melt breccia | crystalline impact melt |
67488 | Apollo 16 | rake | impact melt breccia | crystalline impact melts |
14310 | Apollo 14 | rock | basalt | Crystalline Sample 14310 was collected during the second EVA at Station G. The collection was not well documented -- no lunar-surface photographs were made, and the orientation is known only from surface pitting. This rock is a medium, gray, blocky melt rock, which is subrounded on the pitted sides. It is fine grained and homogeneous in mineralogy. |
12008 | Apollo 12 | rock | basalt | cumulate (ilmenite) ? |
64567 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | dark coherent aphanitic sample with a few vesicles with abundant olivine oikocrysts and is relatively mafic |
64569 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | dark coherent aphanitic sample with a few vesicles with abundant olivine oikocrysts and is relatively mafic |
10018 | Apollo 11 | rock | breccia | Dark grey fine breccia |
63335 | Apollo 16 | rake | impact melt breccia | dark grey microbreccia, cut by a light vein of devitrified glass |
63529 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | dark, homogeneous, coherent finegrained impact melt breccias |
63557 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | dark, homogeneous, coherent finegrained impact melt breccias |
78545 | Apollo 17 | rake | breccia | Dark Matrix Breccia |
78537 | Apollo 17 | rake | breccia | Dark Matrix Breccia |
78536 | Apollo 17 | rake | breccia | Dark Matrix Breccia |
78538 | Apollo 17 | rake | breccia | Dark Matrix Breccia |
78535 | Apollo 17 | rake | breccia | Dark Matrix Breccia |
78546 | Apollo 17 | rake | breccia | Dark Matrix Breccia |
78515 | Apollo 17 | breccia | Dark Matrix Breccia | |
70295 | Apollo 17 | rock | breccia | Dark Matrix Breccia |
78539 | Apollo 17 | rake | breccia | Dark Matrix Breccia |
79526 | Apollo 17 | rock | breccia | Dark Matrix Breccia; original sample remains intack as of this Catalog (Oct 1993); no work has been conducted |
79529 | Apollo 17 | rock | breccia | Dark Matrix Breccia; original sample remains intact as of this Catalog (Oct 1993); no work has been conducted |
79527 | Apollo 17 | rock | breccia | Dark Matrix Breccia; original sample remains intact as of this Catalog (Oct 1993); no work has been conducted |
79525 | Apollo 17 | rock | breccia | Dark Matrix Breccia; original sample remains intact as of this Catalog (Oct 1993); no work has been conducted |
79518 | Apollo 17 | rock | breccia | Dark Matrix Breccia; original sample remains intact as of this Catalog (Oct 1993); no work has been conducted |
79537 | Apollo 17 | rock | breccia | Dark Matrix Breccia; original sample remains intact as of this Catalog (Oct 1993); no work has been conducted |
79528 | Apollo 17 | rock | breccia | Dark Matrix Breccia; original sample remains intact as of this Catalog (Oct 1993); no work has been conducted |
79519 | Apollo 17 | rock | breccia | Dark Matrix Breccia; orignal sample remains intact as of this Catalog (Oct 1993); no work has been conducted |
79536 | Apollo 17 | rock | breccia | Dark Matrix Breccia; the original sample remains intact as of this Catalog (Oct 1993); no work has been conducted |
79517 | Apollo 17 | rock | breccia | Dark Matrix Breccia; the orignal sample remains intact as of the Catalog (Oct 1993) and no wrk has been conducted. |
76545 | Apollo 17 | rake | regolith breccia | Dark Matrix Regolith Breccia |
76565 | Apollo 17 | rake | regolith breccia | Dark Matrix Regolith Breccia |
76548 | Apollo 17 | rake | regolith breccia | Dark Matrix Regolith Breccia |
76506 | Apollo 17 | regolith breccia | Dark Matrix Regolith Breccia | |
76566 | Apollo 17 | rake | regolith breccia | Dark Matrix Regolith Breccia |
78565 | Apollo 17 | rake | breccia | Dark Matrix Soil Breccia |
78567 | Apollo 17 | rake | breccia | Dark Matrix Soil Breccia |
78547 | Apollo 17 | rake | breccia | Dark Matrix Soil Breccia |
78556 | Apollo 17 | rake | breccia | Dark Matrix Soil Breccia |
78557 | Apollo 17 | rake | breccia | Dark Matrix Soil Breccia |
78558 | Apollo 17 | rake | breccia | Dark Matrix Soil Breccia |
78559 | Apollo 17 | rake | breccia | Dark Matrix Soil Breccia |
78518 | Apollo 17 | breccia | Dark Matrix Soil Breccia | |
78566 | Apollo 17 | rake | breccia | Dark Matrix Soil Breccia |
78516 | Apollo 17 | breccia | Dark Matrix Soil Breccia | |
79535 | Apollo 17 | rock | breccia | Dark Mtarix Breccia; original sample remains intact as of this Catalog (Oct 1993); no work has been conducted |
15002 | Apollo 15 | core | Deep core 15001 through 15006 was taken at Station 8, 5 m southeast of the trench. Area has a smooth hummocky surface with fine grained material and rare cobble-sized fragments not visibly related to any particular crater. Astronauts report a hard layer at a depht of 35 cm at the trench; this layer may exist in the core as well. | |
15003 | Apollo 15 | core | Deep core 15001 through 15006 was taken at Station 8, 5 m southeast of the trench. Area has a smooth hummocky surface with fine grained material and rare cobble-sized fragments not visibly related to any particular crater. Astronauts report a hard layer at a depht of 35 cm at the trench; this layer may exist in the core as well. | |
15006 | Apollo 15 | core | Deep core 15001 through 15006 was taken at Station 8, 5 m southeast of the trench. Area has a smooth hummocky surface with fine grained material and rare cobble-sized fragments not visibly related to any particular crater. Astronauts report a hard layer at a depht of 35 cm at the trench; this layer may exist in the core as well. | |
15005 | Apollo 15 | core | Deep core 15001 through 15006 was taken at Station 8, 5 m southeast of the trench. Area has a smooth hummocky surface with fine grained material and rare cobble-sized fragments not visibly related to any particular crater. Astronauts report a hard layer at a depht of 35 cm at the trench; this layer may exist in the core as well. | |
15004 | Apollo 15 | core | Deep core 15001 through 15006 was taken at Station 8, 5 m southeast of the trench. Area has a smooth hummocky surface with fine grained material and rare cobble-sized fragments not visibly related to any particular crater. Astronauts report a hard layer at a depht of 35 cm at the trench; this layer may exist in the core as well. | |
15001 | Apollo 15 | core | Deep core 15001 through 15006 was taken at Station 8, 5 m southeast of the trench. Area has a smooth hummocky surface with fine grained material and rare cobble-sized fragments not visibly related to any particular crater. Astronauts report a hard layer at a depht of 35 cm at the trench; this layer may exist in the core as well. | |
60007 | Apollo 16 | core | Deep core contining samples 60001 through 60007 was drilled at the ALSEP site about 175 m southwest of the LM and 25 m south of the ALSEP central station. The sample area is generally flat with blocks up to 10-15 cm abundant. Deep drill area has the least compacted soil and the highest density of craters in the area. Core stems went easily into the surface. | |
60006 | Apollo 16 | core | soil | Deep core contining samples 60001 through 60007 was drilled at the ALSEP site about 175 m southwest of the LM and 25 m south of the ALSEP central station. The sample area is generally flat with blocks up to 10-15 cm abundant. Deep drill area has the least compacted soil and the highest density of craters in the area. Core stems went easily into the surface. |
60526 | Apollo 16 | rake | dense, aphanitic, coherent rock fragment. It has a high rare-earth-element and major element content characteristic of KREEP (Meyer 1974). | |
68518 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | described as a "cinder" by Smith and Steele (1972). Ryder and Norman (1980) noted that it may be a glass coated lithic fragment, but it has never been subdivided or studied. |
61547 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | devitrified glass containing small clasts of plagioclase and feldspathic impact melt breccia |
61548 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | devitrified glass containing small clasts of plagioclase and feldspathic impact melt breccia |
12065 | Apollo 12 | rock | basalt | diabase (terrestrial analogue); holocrystalline |
12063 | Apollo 12 | rock | basalt | diabase (terrestrial analogue); ilmenite microgabbro similar to Apollo 11 (Chao) |
15007 | Apollo 15 | core | Double core 15007 through 15008 was collected at Station 2, 5m SE of the large boulder on the rim of a 10m crater. Local concentrations of clods on the crater rim, but the site mostly has fine grained character. Lack of blocks suggests a mature, intensely gardened regolith. | |
15008 | Apollo 15 | core | Double core 15007 through 15008 was collected at Station 2, 5m SE of the large boulder on the rim of a 10m crater. Local concentrations of clods on the crater rim, but the site mostly has fine grained character. Lack of blocks suggests a mature, intensely gardened regolith. | |
15011 | Apollo 15 | core | soil | Double core 15010-15011 was collected at Station 9A 20 m N of the rim of Hadley Rille. The site is level with no fresh craters apparent; fragments <20 cm are common, boulders >1m are scattered. Core area was undisturbed by footprings before sampling, even the uppermost part of the core should be undisturbed. |
15010 | Apollo 15 | core | Double core 15010-15011 was collected at Station 9A 20 m N of the rim of Hadley Rille. The site is level with no fresh craters apparent; fragments <20 cm are common, boulders >1m are scattered. Core area was undisturbed by footprings before sampling, even the uppermost part of the core should be undisturbed. | |
79001 | Apollo 17 | core | soil | Double drive tube 79001/79002 was taken 2 meters from two 1 meter craters on the southeast flank of the Van Serg crater ejecta blanket, at Station 9. The site has a gentle slope to the southeast away from Van Serg crater. Fragments 2-20 cm cover 3% of the surface. Astronauts report that driving the first core was easy. The second one was a little tougher, and then it got very hard at the end. >1mm particles were hand picked and not sieved, where they would have broken down, so there is a discontinuity in the size distribution caused by the lab procesures. |
79002 | Apollo 17 | core | soil | Double drive tube 79001/79002 was taken 2 meters from two 1 meter craters on the southeast flank of the Van Serg crater ejecta blanket, at Station 9. The site has a gentle slope to the southeast away from Van Serg crater. Fragments 2-20 cm cover 3% of the surface. Astronauts report that driving the first core was easy. The second one was a little tougher, and then it got very hard at the end. >1mm particles were hand picked and not sieved, where they would have broken down, so there is a discontinuity in the size distribution caused by the lab procesures. |
60009 | Apollo 16 | core | soil | Drive Tube 60009/60010 was taken at Station 10 bout 100 meters southwest of the LM. Samples were taken from the rim of a subdued 60 cm crater. Fragments on the surface are mostly pear sized; none are larger than a few cm. Grain sizes >1mm may have been handled less so friable fragments would be less likely to break apart. |
60010 | Apollo 16 | core | soil | Drive Tube 60009/60010 was taken at Station 10 bout 100 meters southwest of the LM. Samples were taken from the rim of a subdued 60 cm crater. Fragments on the surface are mostly pear sized; none are larger than a few cm. Grain sizes >1mm may have been handled less so friable fragments would be less likely to break apart. |
64002 | Apollo 16 | core | soil | Drive tube 64001 / 64002 collected on Stone Mountain at Station 4, within one crater diameter of a 15 meter subdued doublet crater. The deep sections of the core may contain the best samples of typical Descartes material. The sample area has a 10-15 degree slope to the northwest. There are a few scattered cobbles 5-10 cm. Scattered craters .5 to several meters in diameter are common in the general area, there is a .5 meter crater just southwest of the drive tube. |
74002 | Apollo 17 | core | soil | Drive tube 74001/74002 was collected at the south rim of 120 meter Shorty crater, at Station 4. The cored material is unusually compact. The core contains orange and red colored soil with nearly vertical contacts. The site is near the low place in the crater rim crest. The fragment population is viable. Craters up to several meters in diameter are scattered near the sample site. The core is almost entirely without coarse fines. |
74001 | Apollo 17 | core | soil | Drive tube 74001/74002 was collected at the south rim of 120 meter Shorty crater, at Station 4. The cored material is unusually compact. The core contains orange and red colored soil with nearly vertical contacts. The site is near the low place in the crater rim crest. The fragment population is viable. Craters up to several meters in diameter are scattered near the sample site. The core is almost entirely without coarse fines. |
69001 | Apollo 16 | soil | Drive Tube is unopened and has been in vacuum since it was sealed in CSVC on the moon. | |
64455 | Apollo 16 | impact melt breccia | egg-shaped object about 5 cm long and 3 cm across almost completely covered with thick black glass | |
67955 | Apollo 16 | rock | breccia | exterior surface has a thin brown patina with micrometeorite pits; has been dated at 4.2 b.y. with exposure to cosmic rays for ~ 50 m.y. (age of North Ray Crater). |
14055 | Apollo 14 | rock | regolith breccia | F1 Breccia, friable with light clasts (Wilshire and Jackson 1972); porous unshocked regolith microbreccia (Chao et al. 1972); glass rich regolith with breccia (von Engelhardt et al. 1972); and vitric matrix breccia (VMB) (Simonds et al. 1977) |
76235 | Apollo 17 | rock | other | Feldspathic Granulitic Impactite; may have broken further in sample bag including samples 76230, 76235, 236, 237, 238, 239, 305, 306 and 307 (Heiken et al., 1973; Phinney, 1981) |
76237 | Apollo 17 | rock | other | Feldspathic Granulitic Impactite, part of 76235 |
76236 | Apollo 17 | rock | other | Feldspathic Granulitic Impactite; part of 76235 |
76239 | Apollo 17 | rock | other | Feldspathic Granulitic Impactite; part of 76235 |
76238 | Apollo 17 | rake | other | Feldspathic Granulitic Impactite; part of 76235. |
78155 | Apollo 17 | rock | other | Feldspathic Granulitic Impactite; sample itself may have been projectile that made "pit crater"; may be exotic to site; |
76305 | Apollo 17 | rock | other | Feldspathic Granulitic Impactites, part of 76235 |
76306 | Apollo 17 | rock | other | Feldspathic Granulitic Impactites, part of 76235 |
76307 | Apollo 17 | rock | other | Feldspathic Granulitic Impactites, part of 76235 |
76575 | Apollo 17 | rake | impact melt breccia | Feldspathic Impact Melt Breccia |
60035 | Apollo 16 | breccia | fine-grained, clast-rich, polymict breccia made up of clasts of ferroan anorthosite, troctolite, troctolitic anorthosite and noritic anorthosite. To date, it remains poorly characterized, and requires further study. Recently, it was dated at 4.09 ± 0.1 b.y. with an exposure to cosmic radiation for about 6 m.y. | |
64576 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | fine-grained irregular basaltic texture with inclusions |
15380 | Apollo 15 | rake | basalt | finegrained mare basalt; Ryder (1985) finds that sample 15380 is very similar to 15379. It also has shock features and glass veins. Ryder (1985) states that: "15379 is a finegrained mare basalt containing about 20% stubbyangular and partly "hollow" plagioclase, abundant brownish pyroxene, and at least some olivine and ilmenite". Plagioclase is milky, but not maskelynite. Both plagioclase and pyroxene have deformed twinning. Veins of dark glass, containing bubbles, crosscut the sample and show evidence of flow. |
15379 | Apollo 15 | basalt | finegrained mare basalt; Ryder (1985) states that: "15379 is a finegrained mare basalt containing about 20% stubbyangular and partly "hollow" plagioclase, abundant brownish pyroxene, and at least some olivine and ilmenite". Plagioclase is milky, but not maskelynite. Both plagioclase and pyroxene have deformed twinning. Veins of dark glass, containing bubbles, crosscut the sample and show evidence of flow. Ryder (1985) finds that sample 15380 is very similar to 15379. It also has shock features and glass veins. | |
15674 | Apollo 15 | rake | basalt | fine-grained olivine-normative basalt and they include relict partially-resorbed phenocrysts of olivine. |
15676 | Apollo 15 | rake | basalt | fine-grained olivine-normative basalt and they include relict partially-resorbed phenocrysts of olivine. |
15675 | Apollo 15 | rake | basalt | fine-grained olivine-normative basalt and they include relict partially-resorbed phenocrysts of olivine. |
15683 | Apollo 15 | rake | basalt | fine-grained olivine-normative basalt and they include relict partially-resorbed phenocrysts of olivine. |
15678 | Apollo 15 | rake | basalt | fine-grained olivine-normative basalt and they include relict partially-resorbed phenocrysts of olivine. |
63596 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | fine-grained poikilitic texture where pyroxene oikocrysts surround laths of plagioclase. It is clastic and vesicular. |
10017 | Apollo 11 | rock | basalt | Fine-grained, poikilitic, vesicular basalt composed of clinopyroxene, plagioclase, two generations of ilmenite and subordinate opaques and mesostasis |
10049 | Apollo 11 | rock | basalt | Fine-grained vesicular intersertal basalt with a pyroxene-ilmenite network hosting smaller plagioclase crystals and abundant mesostasis. |
64548 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | fine grain mix of chalky white anorthite and dark aphanitic impact melt |
60315 | Apollo 16 | breccia | flat rock, about 4 cm thick, top exposed surface covered with micrometeorite craters, bottom surface is freshly broken and free of zap pits, is 3.87 b.y. old and has been exposed on the surface to cosmic rays for only ~ 4.5 m.y. | |
62236 | Apollo 16 | rake | soil | found to be a slowly-cooled plutonic rock (Takeda et al. 1979) with an age of ~4.3 b.y. (Borg et al. 1999). |
60095 | Apollo 16 | rock | green glass vitrophyres | Fractured spheroid of yellow-green to light brown glass |
67015 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | fragmental matrix breccia, mostly feldspar, but with a wide range of highland lithologies represented as loose clasts in the matrix; have been dated at 3.9 b.y. and the breccias, itself, has had an exposure to cosmic ray of 51 m.y. |
72275 | Apollo 17 | rock | breccia | fragmental polymict breccia, |
60639 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | fragmental polymict breccia with a low porosity. A wide variety of clasts is present, a mare basalt and a pristine anorthosite being of particular significance. One side of the subangular rock is covered with a smooth dark glass |
79035 | Apollo 17 | rock | breccia | friable breccia |
63507 | Apollo 16 | rake | regolith breccia | friable breccias with a light brown color and is partially coated with black glass |
67519 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | friable, chalky white rock containing lithic fragments of cataclastic anorthosite and feldspathic granulite |
67517 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | friable, chalky white rock containing lithic fragments of cataclastic anorthosite and feldspathic granulite |
67518 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | friable, chalky white rock containing lithic fragments of cataclastic anorthosite and feldspathic granulite |
67516 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | friable, chalky white rock containing lithic fragments of cataclastic anorthosite and feldspathic granulite |
67515 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | friable, chalky white rock containing lithic fragments of cataclastic anorthosite and feldspathic granulite |
61516 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | friable, clastic, seriate and "very light-grey" |
61519 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | friable, clastic, seriate and "very light-grey" |
61518 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | friable, clastic, seriate and "very light-grey" |
61517 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | friable, clastic, seriate and "very light-grey" |
61515 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | friable, clastic, seriate and "very light-grey" |
61295 | Apollo 16 | breccia | friable light matrix breccia with both light and dark clasts; rounded and has many zap pits | |
79226 | Apollo 17 | rock | breccia | Friable Microbreccia; as of this Catalog (Oct 1993), original sample remains intact; no work has been conducted. |
79225 | Apollo 17 | rock | breccia | Friable Microbreccia; As of this Catalog (Oct 1993), original sample remains intact; no work has been conducted. |
64829 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | friable rake fragment |
64835 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | friable rake fragment |
64827 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | friable rake fragment |
64828 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | friable rake fragment |
64826 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | friable rake fragment |
64825 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | friable rake fragment |
64837 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | friable rake fragment |
64836 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | friable rake fragment |
74116 | Apollo 17 | rock | regolith breccia | Friable Regolith Breccia, light gray polymict breccia |
74115 | Apollo 17 | rock | regolith breccia | Friable Regolith Breccia, light gray polymict breccia |
74117 | Apollo 17 | rock | regolith breccia | Friable Regolith Breccia, light gray polymict breccia |
74118 | Apollo 17 | rock | regolith breccia | Friable Regolith Breccia, light gray polymict breccia |
74119 | Apollo 17 | rock | regolith breccia | Friable Regolith Breccia, light gray polymict breccia |
78517 | Apollo 17 | other | Friable White Cataclasite | |
67628 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | "glass bomb" |
79175 | Apollo 17 | rock | regolith breccia | Glass-Bonded Agglutinate |
71515 | Apollo 17 | rock | other | Glass-Bonded Agglutinate |
60115 | Apollo 16 | rock | breccia | Glass-bonded polymict breccia; It has not been studied. |
67629 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | glass-cemented aggregates |
67627 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | glass-cemented aggregates |
67025 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | glass-coated crystalline rock with basaltic melt surrounding xenoliths of plagioclase. |
60666 | Apollo 16 | rake | glassy impact melt breccia | glass-coated impact-melt breccias |
73285 | Apollo 17 | rock | breccia | Glass-Coated Polymict Breccia, medium light gray (N6), |
60275 | Apollo 16 | regolith breccia | glass coated regolith breccia. One side has had the glass coating chipped off by micrometeorite bombardment. | |
68035 | Apollo 16 | rake | glass-coated white anorthosite with a blue-green sheen | |
67115 | Apollo 16 | breccia | glass coat is rather thick, but has been fractured and broken off by micrometeorite bombardment | |
60135 | Apollo 16 | breccia | glass covered, round object with a coarsegrained, highly shocked cumulate interior | |
67568 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | glass-laden fragments |
67567 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | glass-laden fragments |
67569 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | glass-laden fragments |
67566 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | glass-laden fragments; Ryder and Norman (1980) reported that 67566 had a "granoblastic" texture. The protolith was clearly a breccia. |
63538 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | glass-matrix breccia with abundant small clasts |
15505 | Apollo 15 | breccia | glass matrix breccia with an abundance for mare basalt clasts | |
67728 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | glass (?) particles with zaps |
70175 | Apollo 17 | rock | breccia | Glass-Rich Microbreccia |
75066 | Apollo 17 | rock | breccia | Glassy Breccia |
15295 | Apollo 15 | regolith breccia | Glassy matrix regolith breccia with conspicuous white clasts and vesicular glass veins. It was distinctive because of its large size and angularity, and because it had a fillet on its uphill side. It is medium light gray, tough, and penetrated with glass. It has a few zap pits on some surfaces. | |
65767 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | glassy object contains relatively large white clasts |
65757 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | glassy object contains relatively large white clasts |
72559 | Apollo 17 | rock | other | Granoblastic Impactite |
73245 | Apollo 17 | rock | other | Granoblastic Impactite (?); medium gray (N6), probably feldspathic granulite with a little adhering light brownish gray regolith breccia |
67749 | Apollo 16 | rake | granulite or granulite breccia | Granulitic Breccia with clast of KREEP basalt |
78527 | Apollo 17 | rake | breccia | Granulitic Noritic Breccia |
15555 | Apollo 15 | basalt | ("Great Scott") is both the largest and the most intensively studied of the Apollo 15 rocks. It is a medium-grained olivine basalt, with a few percent small vugs. It is probably very close to a liquid composition, i.e., it contains few, if any, accumulated crystals. It crystallized ~3.3 b.y. ago. Unlike other nearby rocks, 15555 was not dust-coated. It is generally tough, but many exterior chips fell off during earth transit and many of these pieces are friable. It is sub-rounded and blocky, with many zap pits. | |
78526 | Apollo 17 | rake | green glass vitrophyres | Green Glass Vitrophyre |
65075 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | greenish gray breccia with a black glass coating |
67435 | Apollo 16 | breccia | grey matrix breccias with both dark and light clasts | |
67739 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | has a brown color, probably due to glass with abundant plagioclase (An98-90) and plagioclase-rich clasts. |
64535 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | has a cosmic ray exposure age of 1.9 m.y; a mix of cataclastic ferroan anorthosite with impact melt. In some cases they also have a thick black glass coating |
67775 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | has a KREEP like rare-earth-element pattern with micrometerorite craters. Reimold et al. (1985) noted it was rather unique among Apollo 16 samples in being the only sample with intergranular texture and containing a high amount of mafic mineral clasts. |
67769 | Apollo 16 | rake | impact melt breccia | has a micropoikilitic texture indicating that it is an impact melt breccia |
67668 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | has a micropoikitiic texture with interlocking oikocrysts of pyroxene surrounding chadocrysts of plagioclase |
68416 | Apollo 16 | impact melt breccia | has an igneous has an intersertal texture characterized by a "fret work" of plagioclase laths with interstitial olivine and pyroxene and minor occurances of opaques, phosphates, residual glass and other minerals | |
15682 | Apollo 15 | rake | basalt | has a rounded top surface with well preserved micrometeorite craters. It is a typical Apollo 15 pigeonite basalt, and has been dated at 3.44 b.y. |
65779 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | has a texture described as basaltic, rather than poikilitic; contains clasts of plagioclase, so it was a breccia before it crystallized |
62255 | Apollo 16 | rock | breccia | has been crushed and granulated by shock and is penetrated with patches and veins of mafic melt |
67615 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | has olivine as the main mafic mineral and it may have a high proportion of opaque phases, is rounded and has zap pits on all sides |
61568 | Apollo 16 | rake | impact melt breccia | has two distinct textures (basalt and poikilitic), separated by a sharp boundary |
64537 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | has zap pits on all surfaces; a mix of cataclastic ferroan anorthosite with impact melt. In some cases they also have a thick black glass coating |
68115 | Apollo 16 | breccia | heterogeneous breccia which is welded together by flow-banded glass; appears to be an orange stain on the surface; unusual area of very vesicular melt on one end | |
79245 | Apollo 17 | rock | other | High Grade Metaclastic; The original sample remains intact at time of the Catalog (Oct 1993); no work has been conducted. |
74287 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | High-It Mare Basalt |
10009 | Apollo 11 | rock | breccia | Highly devitrified breccia with high glass clast content |
74247 | Apollo 17 | rock | basalt | High-Ti Basalt |
74248 | Apollo 17 | rock | basalt | High-Ti Basalt |
74249 | Apollo 17 | rock | basalt | High-Ti Basalt |
74255 | Apollo 17 | rock | basalt | High-Ti Basalt |
71596 | Apollo 17 | rake | high-Ti mare basalt | high-Ti mare basalt |
75065 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
79516 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
79515 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
79265 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
78599 | Apollo 17 | rake | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
78598 | Apollo 17 | rake | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
78597 | Apollo 17 | rake | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
78596 | Apollo 17 | rake | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
78595 | Apollo 17 | rake | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
78589 | Apollo 17 | rake | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
78588 | Apollo 17 | rake | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
78587 | Apollo 17 | rake | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
78586 | Apollo 17 | rake | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
78585 | Apollo 17 | rake | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
78579 | Apollo 17 | rake | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
78578 | Apollo 17 | rake | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
78577 | Apollo 17 | rake | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
78576 | Apollo 17 | rake | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
78575 | Apollo 17 | rake | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
78569 | Apollo 17 | rake | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
78509 | Apollo 17 | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt | |
78507 | Apollo 17 | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt | |
78506 | Apollo 17 | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt | |
78505 | Apollo 17 | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt | |
78135 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
77536 | Apollo 17 | rake | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
77535 | Apollo 17 | rake | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
77516 | Apollo 17 | rake | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
70017 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
70035 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
70075 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
70136 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
70137 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
70138 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
70139 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
70145 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
70146 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
70148 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
70149 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
70155 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
70156 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
70157 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
70165 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
70185 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
70215 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
70255 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
70275 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
70315 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
71035 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
71036 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
71037 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
71045 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
71046 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
71047 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
71048 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
71049 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
71055 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
71065 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
71066 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
71067 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
71068 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
71069 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
71075 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
71085 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
71086 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
71087 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
71088 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
71095 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
71096 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
71097 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
71135 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
71136 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
71155 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
71156 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
71157 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
71175 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
71505 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
71506 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
71507 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
71508 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
71509 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
76538 | Apollo 17 | rake | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
76537 | Apollo 17 | rake | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
71525 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
71526 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
71527 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
71528 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
76136 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
76037 | Apollo 17 | soil-general | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
75089 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
75088 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
75087 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
75086 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
75085 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
74235 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
75075 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
74275 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
74285 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
74286 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
75015 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
75035 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
75055 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt |
70135 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt, |
73219 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | High-Ti Mare Basalt, medium dark gray (N4), the only mare basalt as an individual rock fragment from the South Massif or landslide |
65016 | Apollo 16 | breccia | hollow, broken sphere or glass bubble about 3 - 4 cm in size. The glass surface is smooth and without zap pits, and has a green color. | |
12011 | Apollo 12 | rock | basalt | holocrystalline |
12007 | Apollo 12 | rock | basalt | holocrystalline |
12038 | Apollo 12 | rock | basalt | holocrystalline; diabase (terrestrial analogue); |
14053 | Apollo 14 | rock | basalt | holocrystalline, fine-grained, equigranular mare basalt (Carlson and Walton 1978); basalt (Wilshire and Jackson 1972) and (Quaide and Wrigley 1972); and mare basalt (Simonds et al 1977) |
12005 | Apollo 12 | rock | basalt | holocrystalline, olivine basalt |
64816 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | holocrystalline poikilitic impact melt with a crystallization age of 3.85 b.y. |
60635 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | igneous rock, basaltic texture. |
67559 | Apollo 16 | rake | basalt | igneous texture indicating that it cooled from a liquid, albeit, highly aluminous. It contains a trace of Ni, Ir and Au and has been dated at 3.76 ± 0.04 b.y., which makes it a critical sample. |
76558 | Apollo 17 | rake | impact melt breccia | Imact Melt Breccia |
67941 | Apollo 16 | soil | immature soils from the rim of fresh North Ray Crater. House Rock and other samples of North Ray Crater are breccias | |
77537 | Apollo 17 | rake | impact melt breccia | Impact Melt Breccia |
76245 | Apollo 17 | impact melt breccia | Impact Melt Breccia | |
77526 | Apollo 17 | rake | impact melt breccia | Impact Melt Breccia |
76286 | Apollo 17 | rock | impact melt breccia | Impact Melt Breccia |
76295 | Apollo 17 | rock | impact melt breccia | Impact Melt Breccia |
72705 | Apollo 17 | rock | impact melt breccia | Impact Melt Breccia |
76265 | Apollo 17 | rock | impact melt breccia | Impact Melt Breccia |
76246 | Apollo 17 | impact melt breccia | Impact Melt Breccia | |
77525 | Apollo 17 | rake | impact melt breccia | Impact Melt Breccia |
72737 | Apollo 17 | rock | impact melt breccia | Impact Melt Breccia (?) |
72505 | Apollo 17 | rock | impact melt breccia | Impact Melt Breccia (?) |
76055 | Apollo 17 | rock | impact melt breccia | Impact Melt Breccia; appears to be older than Station 6 Boulder and other Serenitatus impact melts; may be a separate sample of Serenitatus melt sheet from high on North Massif. |
73217 | Apollo 17 | rock | impact melt breccia | Impact Melt Breccia, bulk groundmass may be the low-K Fra Mauro basalt composition common at the Apollo 17 landing site, |
73218 | Apollo 17 | rock | impact melt breccia | Impact Melt Breccia, greenish-gray gray (5GY 6/1) angular breccia; its chemical composition might be similar to the common low-K Fra Mauro basalt impact melts common at the site, originally described as anorthositic. |
72555 | Apollo 17 | rock | impact melt breccia | Impact Melt Breccia (?), has never been allocated or dissected |
72556 | Apollo 17 | rock | impact melt breccia | Impact Melt Breccia (?), has never been allocated or dissected |
72557 | Apollo 17 | rock | impact melt breccia | Impact Melt Breccia (?), has never been dissected or allocated |
72735 | Apollo 17 | rock | impact melt breccia | Impact Melt Breccia (High-K) |
72537 | Apollo 17 | rock | impact melt breccia | Impact Melt Breccia (?), identification is uncertain because it has never been allocated or dissected |
72538 | Apollo 17 | rock | impact melt breccia | Impact Melt Breccia (?), identification is uncertain because it has never been allocated or dissected |
73225 | Apollo 17 | rock | impact melt breccia | Impact Melt Breccia (?), light gray (N5), contains plagioclases, possibly a ranoblastic impactite |
73145 | Apollo 17 | rock | impact melt breccia | Impact Melt Breccia (?), medium dark gray (N4), homogeneous |
73155 | Apollo 17 | rock | impact melt breccia | Impact Melt Breccia, medium dark gray (N4) in color, rather heterogeneous |
73156 | Apollo 17 | rock | impact melt breccia | Impact Melt Breccia or Granoblastic Impactite, light gray and homogeneous |
72546 | Apollo 17 | rock | breccia | Impact Melt Breccia (?), sample has never been allocated or dissected |
72545 | Apollo 17 | rock | breccia | Impact Melt Breccia (?), sample has never been allocated or dissected |
72547 | Apollo 17 | rock | impact melt breccia | Impact Melt Breccia (?), sample has never been allocated or dissected |
76036 | Apollo 17 | rock | impact melt breccia | Impact Melt Breccia; sample has not been studied at time of this Catalog (Aug 1994) but is apparently similar to and probably piece of 76035. |
76275 | Apollo 17 | rock | impact melt breccia | Impact Melt Breccia; sample has not been well studied (Aug 1994) |
73216 | Apollo 17 | rock | impact melt breccia | Impact Melt Breccia, tan to olive gray (5Y 5/1) |
64815 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | impact melt breccia with a coarse poikilitic texture and KREEP-like composition. The age has been determined to be 3.89 ± 0.01 b.y. |
63585 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | impact melt breccia with regions that have basaltic texture and other areas that are poikilitic, and has numerous micrometeorite craters on the surface |
77075 | Apollo 17 | rock | norite | Impact Melt Dike in Cataclastic Norite |
68535 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | impact melt fragments cemented by a black glass |
68536 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | impact melt fragments cemented by a black glass |
67759 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | impact melt with fine-grained subophitic and poikilitic textures, with glass veins |
67757 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | impact melt with fine-grained subophitic and poikilitic textures, with glass veins |
61180 | Apollo 16 | soil | Innermost of a radial sample sequence with 61500, 61160, and 61140. The site is level until there is a break at Plum crater, fragments <2 cm are common, >10 cm are sparse. Craters <10 cm are dense and craters <1 meter are common. Some of the larger craters are subdued and some are sharp. | |
14230 | Apollo 14 | core | soil | Intended to be a triple core tube, but driving became hard after a tube and a quarter, and material in the top tube fell out. Area generally level and free of large blocks. This sample from the top of three stratigraphic units of core. |
67975 | Apollo 16 | rock | fragmental breccia | Irregularly shaped rock with approximately equal amounts of pale gray, fragmental, friable breccia and a coating of frothy, clast-rich glass. |
15536 | Apollo 15 | basalt | is a fine-grained, olivine-bearing mare basalt in which fine-grained pyroxenes are enclosed in poikilitic plagioclases and olivine phenocrysts are scattered. 15535 is finer-grained than 15536 chipped from the same boulder. | |
15535 | Apollo 15 | rock | basalt | is a fine-grained, olivine-bearing mare basalt in which fine-grained pyroxenes are enclosed in poikilitic plagioclases and olivine phenocrysts are scattered. It is finer-grained than 15536, chipped from the same boulder. |
15418 | Apollo 15 | breccia | is a highly-shocked, granulitic breccia that has a chemical composition of "gabbroic anorthosite" – and has, from time to time, been considered as representative of a portion of the original lunar crust. 15418 has been dated at 4.04 b.y., with an exposure age of 250 m.y. It has micrometeorite craters on all sides. | |
60335 | Apollo 16 | impact melt breccia | is aluminous in composition, with relative high trace element content; found to contain substantial Ni, Ir and Au. The Pb/Pb age of 60335 was determined to be 4.08 b.y. | |
67667 | Apollo 16 | rake | is coherent and has a few micrometeorite craters on the surface, found to be chemically "pristine" and to have an old age (4.2 b.y.). | |
62290 | Apollo 16 | soil | is the residue from the bag that was used to return rock sample 62295 and may or may not be a proper soil sample | |
15401 | Apollo 15 | soil | is very immature and it has an unusual grain size distribution weight towards large particles. The average grain size distribution of 15401 is 89 microns. | |
15357 | Apollo 15 | rake | impact melt breccia | It has been dated at 3.85 b.y. and should be compared with 15356 and 15359. It may be a rare piece of the Imbrium melt sheet. |
67736 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | It has zap pits; Stoffler et al. (1981) describe the matrix as "micropoikilitic". Photos of the exterior show what appears to be pink spinel (?) grains (not confirmed). |
15362 | Apollo 15 | rake | It is a cataclastic ferroan anorthosite that proved difficult to date. It has an old exposure age (428 m.y.). | |
15308 | Apollo 15 | impact melt breccia | It is a clast-rich impact melt rock with high content of trace elements. It has not been successfully dated. | |
15286 | Apollo 15 | breccia | It is a coherent glassmatrix soil breccia, similar to other samples collected at same time. Ryder (1985) even suggests that 15286 may be spalled from 15265-15267, but that seems impossible because glass wraps around the particle. | |
15359 | Apollo 15 | rake | impact melt breccia | It is a fine-grained mciropoikilitic impact melt with mineral clasts, and has a KREEP-like chemical composition. It has been dated at ~3.86 b.y. and should be compared with impact melt rocks 15356 and 15357. |
15358 | Apollo 15 | rake | breccia | It is a glass-matrix breccia that contains clasts of KREEP basalt |
15125 | Apollo 15 | rake | basalt | It is a pyroxene-phyric basalt, with numerous skeletal pyroxenes and some olivine embedded in a dark, cryptocrystalline matrix (quench texture). The composition and texture of 15125 are similar to that of larger sample 15597. |
15356 | Apollo 15 | rake | impact melt breccia | It is a very finegrained impact melt rock and has been dated at 3.84 b.y. (the apparent age of the Imbrium event). It should be compared with 15357 and 15359. |
15206 | Apollo 15 | impact melt breccia | It is a vesicular glassy breccia containing KREEP basalt and mare basalt clasts. Unlike 15205 the clasts are shocked and penetrated by glass and there is a higher proportion of matrix (figure 3). It is an impact melt rock, that was probably generated from a regolith. Unlike 15205 the clasts are shocked and penetrated by glass and there is a higher proportion of matrix. It is an impact melt rock, that was probably generated from a regolith. | |
15662 | Apollo 15 | rake | basalt | It is a vesicular olivine-normative basalt. |
15085 | Apollo 15 | basalt | It is one of the samples collected as a suite, from different distances from a small crater (15065 to 15085). It is a is about 3.4 b.y. old and is coarse-grained, quartz-normative mare basalt (catalog reports 5 mm) dominated by pigeonite. | |
15698 | Apollo 15 | rake | breccia | It may be a glass covered "bomb" with a lithic fragment inside (Ryder 1985). It has not been studied. |
65715 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | Keil et al. (1972) and Ryder and Norman (1981) describe the sample as a friable grey and white breccia with abundant comminuted plagioclase. |
61016 | Apollo 16 | impact melt breccia | known as "Big Muley"; named after Bill Muehlberger, the leader of the Apollo 16 field geology team | |
66095 | Apollo 16 | rock | breccia | labeled "Rusty Rock"; has abundant zap pits on one side, and is 3.8 b.y., and cosmic ray exposure is 40-80 m.y. |
65035 | Apollo 16 | rock | breccia | large clasts of light-colored cataclastic anorthosite intermixed with dark-colored basaltic impact melt; covered or coated with a thick glass coat on one side. An age of 2.29 m.y. indicates that this rock was derived from South Ray Crater. |
65056 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | large glass object that contains interesting white clasts |
64501 | Apollo 16 | rake | soil | large number of glass particles |
14321 | Apollo 14 | rock | breccia | largest sample returned during Apollo 14 mission; also known as "Big Bertha". This sample is the third largest sample returned by any Apollo mission. This breccia was collected during the second EVA at Station C1, near the rim of Cone Crater. A voice transcript made during the collection, as well as a more detailed discussion of the lunar environment can be found in Geological Survey Professional Paper 880 (Swann et al., 1977). The sample was returned in bag 1038. This large sample is typical of the apparently dominent rock type in the Cone Crater ejecta blanket. It is a moderately well-indurated breccia, in which predominately dark clasts are set in a lighter matrix. The relative abundance of this rock type suggests that it is probalby representative of the Fra Mauro Formation. This rock, 14321, is a partly annealed, moderately coherent polymict breccia. The blocky surface is gray with patches of black and white. |
60627 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | light colored and must be mostly plagioclase, because it seems large for its weight (low density) and has zap pits with transparent glass linings. |
60619 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | light gray anorthosite, coherent, recrystallized, plagioclaserich rock with minor glass-splash and a few micrometeorite craters. It has not been well studied. |
65357 | Apollo 16 | rake | impact melt breccia | Light gray, coherent, poikilitic impact melt , and is rounded and covered with micrometeorite craters |
76567 | Apollo 17 | rake | regolith breccia | Light Matrix Regolith Breccia |
78508 | Apollo 17 | breccia | Light Matrix Soil Breccia | |
75115 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | Light olive gray subrounded, fine-grained basalt, with an equigranular fabric and several penetrative fractures. |
15289 | Apollo 15 | regolith breccia | Lunar breccias 15288 and 15289 were collected from the rim of a small crater at station 6 on the Apennine Front - along with 15265, 15285 and 15286. All of these samples are similar regolith breccias. They are relatively coherent with glass-cemented matrix. | |
15288 | Apollo 15 | breccia | Lunar breccias 15288 and 15289 were collected from the rim of a small crater at station 6 on the Apennine Front - along with 15265, 15285 and 15286. All of these samples are similar regolith breccias. They are relatively coherent with glass-cemented matrix. | |
15016 | Apollo 15 | basalt | Lunar Sample 15016 is a highly vesicular, olivine-normative, basalt with a major element composition similar to that of non-vesicular basalt 15555. It is a medium-grained basalt with subhedral phenocrysts of zoned pyroxene (1-2 mm) and olivine (~1 mm) set in a matrix of subophitic intergrowths of pyroxene and plagioclase. | |
15118 | Apollo 15 | rake | basalt | Lunar sample 15118 was collected by rake as part of a comprehensive sample; chemically it is a quartz-normative basalt with pyroxene phenocrysts set in a fine groundmass. It has not been dated. |
15459 | Apollo 15 | regolith breccia | Lunar sample 15459 is a large, dense, regolith breccia from Spur Crater which has a mineral, glass and chemical composition like that of the local soil. | |
15529 | Apollo 15 | basalt | Lunar sample 15529 is a very vesicular mare basalt that remains unstudied. Dirt fills some vesicles, but not all, and the sample has no obvious zap pits.The sample is light olive gray, rounded, tough, and very vesicular. It had a 3-cm high fillet, but has no zap pits. | |
67075 | Apollo 16 | rock | anorthite | Lunar sample 67075 is very friable. Detailed petrographic description showed that the sample may be a mixture of closely related anorthositic rocks from a layered igneous intrusion, and it has been shown to be 4.47 b.y. old, with about 50 m.y. exposure to cosmic rays |
15669 | Apollo 15 | rake | basalt | Lunar samples 15665 and 15669 are rake samples from the edge of Hadley Rille in an area called The Terrace . They are similar to the rest of the olivine-normative basalt samples from this location, except, perhaps, they contains abundant Fe-rich pyroxene rather than fayalite in the residuum. The habit of ilmenite is also unusual. They have not been dated. |
15665 | Apollo 15 | rake | basalt | Lunar samples 15665 and 15669 are rake samples from the edge of Hadley Rille in an area called The Terrace . They are similar to the rest of the olivine-normative basalt samples from this location, except, perhaps, they contains abundant Fe-rich pyroxene rather than fayalite in the residuum. The habit of ilmenite is also unusual. They have not been dated. |
69920 | Apollo 16 | rake | soil | mature soil |
68821 | Apollo 16 | soil | mature soil and should be compared with sample 68841, collected nearby. | |
15556 | Apollo 15 | rock | basalt | medium-grained, extremely vesicular olivine-normative basalt containing small olivine phenocrysts. |
10003 | Apollo 11 | rock | basalt | Medium-grained subophitic basalt composed of clinopyroxene, two generations of plagioclase, ilmenite with subordinate cristobalite and mesostasis. |
10047 | Apollo 11 | rock | basalt | Medium-grained subophitic basalt composed of clinopyroxene, two generations of plagioclase, ilmenite with subordinate cristobalite pyroxferroite and mesostasis. |
79115 | Apollo 17 | rock | breccia | Medium Gray Soil Breccia; described as a lumpy, generally fine-grained, friable basalt, with intense platy fracturing, particularly on the west face (Apollo 17 Lunar Sample Information Catalog, 1973) |
79215 | Apollo 17 | rock | breccia | Metabreccia |
72135 | Apollo 17 | rock | breccia | Microbreccia |
79125 | Apollo 17 | rock | breccia | Microbreccia; As no work has been conducted on this sample, it is still intact as of this catalog (Oct 1993) |
64538 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | micrometeorite craters on all surfaces; majority of the sample is a coherent, medium grey, glassy matrix lithology |
67945 | Apollo 16 | breccia | micropoikilitic impact breccia | |
72355 | Apollo 17 | rock | impact melt breccia | Micropoikilitic impact melt breccia |
72395 | Apollo 17 | rock | impact melt breccia | Micropoikilitic impact melt breccia |
72335 | Apollo 17 | rock | impact melt breccia | Micropoikilitic impact melt breccia |
72375 | Apollo 17 | rock | impact melt breccia | Micropoikilitic impact melt breccia |
76576 | Apollo 17 | rake | impact melt breccia | Micropoikilitic Impact Melt Breccia |
76556 | Apollo 17 | rake | impact melt breccia | Micropoikilitic Impact Melt Breccia |
76557 | Apollo 17 | rake | impact melt breccia | Micropoikilitic Impact Melt Breccia |
77518 | Apollo 17 | rake | impact melt breccia | Micropoikilitic Impact Melt Breccia |
76315 | Apollo 17 | rock | impact melt breccia | Micropoikilitic Impact Melt Breccia |
72558 | Apollo 17 | rock | impact melt breccia | Micropoikilitic Impact Melt Breccia |
77035 | Apollo 17 | rock | impact melt breccia | Micropoikilitic Impact Melt Breccia |
77519 | Apollo 17 | rake | impact melt breccia | Micropoikilitic Impact Melt Breccia |
76555 | Apollo 17 | rake | impact melt breccia | Micropoikilitic Impact Melt Breccia |
77115 | Apollo 17 | rock | impact melt breccia | Micropoikilitic Impact Melt Breccia |
76505 | Apollo 17 | impact melt breccia | Micropoikilitic Impact Melt Breccia | |
72435 | Apollo 17 | rock | impact melt breccia | Micropoikilitic Impact Melt Breccia, can be assumed to have formed during the Serenitatis event, has major and trace element chemistry similar to other Apollo 17 low-K Fra Mauro impacat melts |
72549 | Apollo 17 | rock | impact melt breccia | Micropoikilitic Impact Melt Breccia, chemistry is similar to the common low-K Fra Mauro melts that dominate the Apollo 17 highlands samples |
72736 | Apollo 17 | rock | impact melt breccia | Micropoikilitic Impact Melt Breccia, chemistry is similar to the common low-K Fra Mauro melts that dominate the Apollo 17 highlands samples, |
72548 | Apollo 17 | rock | impact melt breccia | Micropoikilitic Impact Melt Breccia, its chemistry is similar to the common low-K Fra Mauro melts that dominate the Apollo 17 highlands samples |
73275 | Apollo 17 | rock | impact melt breccia | Micropoikilitic Impact Melt Breccia, lclast-bearing, with chemical composition similar to the low-K Fra Mauro melts common at the site and generally presumed to represent the Serentatis impact melt, is light gray in color.. |
67565 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | micropoikitiic texture with interlocking oikocrysts of pyroxene surrounding chadocrysts of plagioclase. Ilmenite is concentrated at the boundaries of the pyroxene oikocysts. |
72315 | Apollo 17 | rock | impact melt breccia | micropokilitic impact melt breccia |
72738 | Apollo 17 | rock | impact melt breccia | Microsubophitic Impact Melt Breccia |
72536 | Apollo 17 | rock | impact melt breccia | Microsubophitic Impact Melt Breccia, its chemistry is imilar to the common low-K Fra Mauro melts that dominate the Apollo 17 highlands samples |
72539 | Apollo 17 | rock | breccia | Microsubophitic Impact Melt Breccia (?), its chemistry is similar to te common low-K Fra Mauro melts that dominate the Apollo 17 highlands samples |
72535 | Apollo 17 | rock | impact melt breccia | Microsubophitic Impact Melt Breccia, its chemistry is similar to the common low-K Fra Mauro melts that dominate the Apollo 17 highlands samples |
68516 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | mix of dark glass and grey impact melt clasts; age has been determined - 3.8 b.y. |
65326 | Apollo 16 | rake | anorthite | Moderately coherent cataclastic anorthosite; has a "bronze colored" streak |
67617 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | moderately coherent impact melt breccia with zap pits on one surface |
76035 | Apollo 17 | rock | impact melt breccia | Nonvesicular Impact Melt Breccia |
67510 | Apollo 16 | rake | soil | noticeably coarser grain size and less mature compared with other lunar soils probably due to the fact that NRC is only 50 m.y. old |
67481 | Apollo 16 | noticeably coarser grain size and less mature compared with other lunar soils probably due to the fact that NRC is only 50 m.y. old | ||
64475 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | numerous micrometeorite craters; "black and white" rocks with veins of dark impact melt rock intruding white cataclastic anorthosite |
64476 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | numerous micrometeorite craters; "black and white" rocks with veins of dark impact melt rock intruding white cataclastic anorthosite |
64585 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | old impact melt with unique texture, brownish color and a devitrified glass matrix |
12004 | Apollo 12 | rock | basalt | olivine basalt |
15145 | Apollo 15 | rake | breccia | Olivine-normative mare basalt breccia |
12012 | Apollo 12 | rock | basalt | Olivine Pyroxenite; holocrystalline |
12006 | Apollo 12 | rock | basalt | Oliving Basalt, holocrystalline |
66075 | Apollo 16 | rock | fragmental breccia | one of many coherent, light matrix breccias from Apollo 16 and has about equal amounts of both dark and light aphanitic clasts; has been dated at about 3.8 b.y. |
65905 | Apollo 16 | breccia | one of several dense particles found in soil sample 65901 | |
68815 | Apollo 16 | rock | breccia | outer surface covered with zap pits; the broken surface contains large vugs and vesicles. 68815 is one of the samples that date the age of South Ray Crater (Drozd et al. 1974; Pepin et al. 1974) and is said to have had a simple exposure history. |
64425 | Apollo 16 | breccia | part anorthosite and part impact melt; most surfaces have micrometeorite craters, indicating it had once been a surface sample | |
79155 | Apollo 17 | rock | other | Partially Glass-Coated Gabbro |
10019 | Apollo 11 | rock | breccia | Partly devitrified breccia with low lithic clast content |
67626 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | "partly devitrified glass bomb" |
10061 | Apollo 11 | rock | breccia | Partly devitrified, medium grey fine breccia with marked matrix differences between zones |
10021 | Apollo 11 | rock | breccia | Partly devitrified typical breccia with a relatively low amount of glass fragments |
15301 | Apollo 15 | rake | soil | part of a comprehensive sample collected at Spur Crater including rake sample 15310 and soils 15410, 15420 and pedestal 15431. The rim of Spur Crater had a significant number of small rock on the surface. This is the location of the Apollo 15 "green glass" and 15301 contained many beads of this interesting lunar material. |
63526 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | Phinney et al. (1976) describe these samples together as "tough crystalline breccia". |
63555 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | Phinney et al. (1976) describe these samples together as "tough crystalline breccia". |
63525 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | Phinney et al. (1976) describe these samples together as "tough crystalline breccia". |
63528 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | Phinney et al. (1976) describe these samples together as "tough crystalline breccia". |
64818 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | Phinney et al. (1976) refer to 64818 as a "tough crystalline breccia" with 5% vugs and vesicles |
64559 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | piece of the dark lithology that is part of the abundant dimict breccias from that location; texture is that of a basalt, but since it includes clasts of anorthite, it is an impact melt breccia |
63355 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | Pieces of 63355 have patina and micrometeorite craters |
67948 | Apollo 16 | basalt | plagioclase-rich, ophitic basalt with igneous texture | |
60625 | Apollo 16 | rake | impact melt breccia | plagioclase-rich, white rock, but it also has high content of REE |
67746 | Apollo 16 | rake | plagioclase with a granuliticpoikilitic texture, Large pyroxene grains completely surround rounded olivine and plagioclase with Ilmenite and metallic Ni-Fe grains found between pyroxene oikocrysts. | |
77017 | Apollo 17 | rock | other | Poikilitic Anorthsitic Gabbo, annealed, feldspathic breccia |
76137 | Apollo 17 | rock | impact melt breccia | Poikilitic Impacat Melt Breccia; sample has not been studied at time of this Catalog (Aug 1994) |
65015 | Apollo 16 | rock | impact melt breccia | Poikilitic Impact Melt |
76559 | Apollo 17 | rake | impact melt breccia | Poikilitic Impact Melt Breccia |
77545 | Apollo 17 | rake | impact melt breccia | Poikilitic Impact Melt Breccia |
77539 | Apollo 17 | rake | impact melt breccia | Poikilitic Impact Melt Breccia |
77515 | Apollo 17 | rake | impact melt breccia | Poikilitic Impact Melt Breccia |
76577 | Apollo 17 | rake | impact melt breccia | Poikilitic Impact Melt Breccia |
63556 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | poikilitic impact melt with the bulk composition of KREEP. It has a few micrometeorite zap pits |
60626 | Apollo 16 | rake | impact melt breccia | poikilitic texture, but the plagioclase chadocrysts have indistinct boundaries. |
64568 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | poikilitic texture with a network of pyroxene phenocrysts surrounding small laths of plagioclase with zap pits |
63595 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | polymict fragmental breccias, with angular clasts of plagioclase, brown glassy breccias, aphanitic melts and feldspathic granulite. |
63588 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | polymict fragmental breccias, with angular clasts of plagioclase, brown glassy breccias, aphanitic melts and feldspathic granulite. |
79135 | Apollo 17 | rock | breccia | Polymict Matrix Breccia |
72145 | Apollo 17 | rock | breccia | Polymict Microbreccia; original all remains; no subsamples have been prepared and no work has been conducted in this Catalog (Oct 1993) |
67549 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | porous and rounded with a light matrix and both light and dark clasts |
67546 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | porous and rounded with a light matrix and both light and dark clasts. |
12014 | Apollo 12 | rock | basalt | porphyritic olivine microgabbro |
15382 | Apollo 15 | rake | basalt | pristine feldspathic basalt with high rare-earth-element content. Only a few pristine samples of this important rock type were returned from the moon, also including 15386 and fragments in 15434 and other Apollo 15 soils. These fragments were recognized as samples of chilled volcanic liquid and have been a source of much speculation |
15623 | Apollo 15 | rake | basalt | Pyroxene, olivine and plagioclase form an interlocking network that is "peppered" by minute opaque minerals; ilmenite and spinel |
15620 | Apollo 15 | rake | basalt | Pyroxene, olivine and plagioclase form an interlocking network that is "peppered" by minute opaque minerals; ilmenite and spinel |
15666 | Apollo 15 | rake | basalt | pyroxene-phyric basalt with a variolitic groundmass. It also includes some olivine. |
15597 | Apollo 15 | basalt | pyroxene vitrophyre consisting mainly of acicular pyroxene phenocrysts, typically with a glass core, set in a matrix of brown glass which shows incipient crystallization in only a few places. | |
15641 | Apollo 15 | rake | basalt | Rake fragments 15610, 15633, 15641, 15643 and 15663 are grouped together because they are relatively coarse-grained samples of the abundant olivinenormative Apollo 15 basalt clan |
15633 | Apollo 15 | rake | basalt | Rake fragments 15610, 15633, 15641, 15643 and 15663 are grouped together because they are relatively coarse-grained samples of the abundant olivinenormative Apollo 15 basalt clan |
15610 | Apollo 15 | rake | basalt | Rake fragments 15610, 15633, 15641, 15643 and 15663 are grouped together because they are relatively coarse-grained samples of the abundant olivinenormative Apollo 15 basalt clan |
15643 | Apollo 15 | rake | basalt | Rake fragments 15610, 15633, 15641, 15643 and 15663 are grouped together because they are relatively coarse-grained samples of the abundant olivinenormative Apollo 15 basalt clan |
15663 | Apollo 15 | rake | basalt | Rake fragments 15610, 15633, 15641, 15643 and 15663 are grouped together because they are relatively coarse-grained samples of the abundant olivinenormative Apollo 15 basalt clan |
63539 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | Rake Sample 63548 contains 63539 and 63586 are fragments of fine-grained, coherent impact melt |
63548 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | Rake Sample 63548 contains 63539 and 63586 are fragments of fine-grained, coherent impact melt |
63586 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | Rake Sample 63548 contains 63539 and 63586 are fragments of fine-grained, coherent impact melt |
63549 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | rake sample with numerous micrometeorite cratrers; is coherent and appears to be a homogeneous impact melt rock. It has been dated at 3.84 b.y. |
67480 | Apollo 16 | rake | soil | Reference soil 67840 accompanies rake sample 67510; sample area is in a local north-south swale, the surface is soft and fine; fragments greater than 10 cm are sparse and the crew reported "sinking in on the slopes about 6 inches." |
76500 | Apollo 17 | soil | Reference soil 76500 and rake soil 76530-76577 were collected at Station 6, 25 meters west of the boulder cluster on the ejecta blanket of a 10 meter crater. The site slopes 11 degrees to the south with 1-10 cm fragments scattered randomly. One large 10 meter crater and many <30 cm craters are found at the site. | |
66036 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | regolith breccia, but has excess 40Ar and has been termed "ancient regolith breccia". |
66037 | Apollo 16 | breccia | regolith breccia, but has excess 40Ar and has been termed "ancient regolith breccia". | |
66035 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | regolith breccia, but has excess 40Ar and has been termed "ancient regolith breccia". 66035 has zap pits on all surfaces so it must have "rolled or jumped" on the regolith. |
15558 | Apollo 15 | rock | regolith breccia | Regolith breccia derived mainly from mare components. |
15565 | Apollo 15 | regolith breccia | Regolith breccia fragments ranging from friable to coherent. At the end of the third EVA during Apollo 15, the astronauts collected loose undocumented samples from the regolith as ‘grab’ samples and placed them in sample collection bag #2. The residue from this bag (about 38 pieces) was numbered together as 15565. | |
15298 | Apollo 15 | regolith breccia | Regolith breccia with a glassy matrix containing numerous small glass, mineral, and lithic fragments. | |
67647 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | relatively coherent with lots of zap pits and has glass clasts, and glass in the matrix |
60018 | Apollo 16 | rock | breccia | relatively inhomogeneous and apparently not used for cosmic-ray-penetration studies. However, it was determined to have a cosmic ray exposure age of 2.1 m.y. |
67605 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | relatively large friable, white particle about the size, shape and color of a golf ball |
64801 | Apollo 16 | rake | soil | relatively mature soil with average grain size 80 microns |
64810 | Apollo 16 | rake | relatively mature soil with average grain size 80 microns | |
67635 | Apollo 16 | rake | relatively unshocked ferroan anorthosite, but have not been dated; angular, chalky white, very homogeneous sample with very finely granular sugary texture | |
15260 | Apollo 15 | soil | Rock sample 15012 and soil 15260 were collected from the bottom of a trench dug into the south rim of a 12 meter diameter crater 10-15 meters downslope from the LRV at Station 6. Sample 15012 was also collected at the bottom of this trench and placed in a Special Environmental Sample Container. The surface where the trench was dug is littered with fragments ranging from .5 - 2 cm size, but distinctly fewer than on the north rim of the same crater. This may have prompted the astronaut's remarks that the south rim was softer and the north rim more granular. | |
10066 | Apollo 11 | rock | breccia | Rounded, dark grey, fine breccia |
65927 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | rounded, friable soil breccia |
65925 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | rounded, friable soil breccia |
65926 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | rounded, friable soil breccias |
10073 | Apollo 11 | rock | breccia | Rounded, medium dark grey, partly devitrified microbreccia with low lithic clast content |
15661 | Apollo 15 | rake | basalt | rounded surface from micrometeorite bombardment (and is sort of shaped like a golf ball). However, it is vesicular, vuggy and has a few olivine phenocrysts; typical of olivine-normative basalts. |
10082 | Apollo 11 | rock | breccia | Rounded to subrounded, dark grey to black, partly devitrified microbreccia with no large lithic clasts |
10048 | Apollo 11 | rock | breccia | Rounded to subrounded, medium light grey, fine breccia |
63506 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | round particle is coherent and appears to be mostly plagioclase |
15059 | Apollo 15 | regolith breccia | Ryder (1985) described 15059 as a "tough regolith breccia containing mare basalt and KREEP basalt and abundant glass, in a glassy matrix. A thin very vesicular glass coat covers most of the sample and intrudes it along fractures." | |
15017 | Apollo 15 | Ryder (1985) gives a description of 15017. It is a very vesicular glass with numerous included mineral grains. Only the outside surface was smooth and shiny. Some interior vesicles were open to the outside. There were a few zap pit on some of the surface, but little accretionary material. | ||
15658 | Apollo 15 | rake | basalt | Ryder (1985) provides the only description: "15658 is a medium-grained, olivine-bearing basalt. Pigeonites range from 1 to 2 mm long and are twinned and zoned. Most plagioclases for stubby crystals up to about 1 mm, some of which are hollow. Some radial growth of plagioclase and pyroxene is present. Olivine forms scattered anhedral phenocrysts, and smaller grains are present, many as inclusions in pigeonite. Cristobalite, fayalite, and a range of opaque phases are present." No mode is given. |
15634 | Apollo 15 | rake | basalt | Ryder (1985) provides the only description these particles. Although he calls them "coarse grained", the grain size is still less than 1 mm |
15639 | Apollo 15 | rake | basalt | Ryder (1985) provides the only description these particles. Although he calls them "coarse grained", the grain size is still less than 1 mm |
64478 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | Ryder and Norman (1980) term 64478 a "glass-coated impact melt". The interior has a poikilitic texture in places |
14006 | Apollo 14 | rock | breccia | Sample 14006 was collected as part of the contingency sample during the first EVA in the vicinity of the lunar module. It was returned in weigh bag 1039 along with the rest of the contingency sample; |
14008 | Apollo 14 | rock | Sample 14008 was collected from the LM vicinity during the first EVA as part of the contingency sample. It was returned in weigh bag 1039 along with the rest of the contingency samples (14001-14012); sample is fine graned fragmental rock with avg grain size less than 0.1 mm; texturally and mineralogically homogeneous. | |
14047 | Apollo 14 | rock | breccia | Sample 14047 was collected at Station B, 330 m NE of LM and 65 m NNW of the rim of Weird Crater. It was placed in documented bag 5N and returned in ALSRC 1006. |
14049 | Apollo 14 | rock | breccia | Sample 14049 was collected during the second EVA from Station Bg; placed in bag 6N by the astronauts who said they collected it from a crater rim. The lunar location and orientation are not documented by lunar surface photographs. It is a fragmental rock and is extremely friable and soft. |
14051 | Apollo 14 | rock | breccia | Sample 14051 was collected at station C' which was located 1.29 km ENE of LM and approximately 95 m SE of the rim of Cone Crater. The sample was collected on a gentle southward slope and was partly buried. The area was characterized by abundant fragments ranging from the limit of resolution up to 1.5 m blocks. The sample was returned in documented bag 7N in ALSRC 1006. |
14056 | Apollo 14 | soil-general | breccia | Sample 14056 was collected from station E during the second EVA. It was returned in bag 15N along with samples 14055-14062; sample is extremely friable and appears to be coherent soil clod, medium brownish in color. |
14057 | Apollo 14 | soil | Sample 14057 was collected from Station E during the second EVA. It was returned in bag 15N in ALSRC 1006 along with samples 14055-14062. Sample is very friable and is brownish gray in color. | |
14058 | Apollo 14 | rock | Sample 14058 was collected from station E during the second EVA. It was placed in bag 15N and returned in ALSRC 1006 along with 14055-14062. Sample is subangular, elongate rock tapered at one end. It is olive gray in color and is fine-grained with fragments larger than 1 mm comprising 15% of the rock. | |
14059 | Apollo 14 | breccia | Sample 14059 was collected during the second EVA from station E. It was placed in bag 15N by the astronauts, and returned in ALSRC 1006 along with samples 14055-14062. Sample consists of two pieces, larger being irregular in shap and smaller being subrounded. | |
14060 | Apollo 14 | rock | breccia | Sample 14060 was collected from station E during the second EVA. It was placed in bag 15N by the astronauts and returned in ALSRC 1006 along with 14055-14062. Sample is well rounded (almost spherical), friable, fragmental rock and is medium gray in color. |
14061 | Apollo 14 | breccia | Sample 14061 was collected druing the second EVA from station E. It was placed in bag 15N by the astronauts and returned in ALSRC 1006 along with 14055-14062. (Sample 14062 is residue). Sample is friable and appears grayish brown in color. It is an equidimensional, subrounded block. | |
14064 | Apollo 14 | rock | breccia | Sample 14064 was collected in the White Rocks area at Station C1 and was returned in bag 16 along with 14063 and 14065 (residue) in ALSRC 1006. There was a strong feeling at the LRL that 14064 and 14063 are parts of the same rock because not only do they look very much alike, but 14064 has a protruding 1 cm clast, while 14063 has a 1 cm clast mold. Shepard stated that he had put "a couple" of hand specimens into bag 16, which is what was found. Sample 14064 is one of those studied by the Imbrium Consortium. Sample is pale gray with leucocratic matrix and contains approximately 40% clasts and 60% matrix. The sample is friable "white rock". |
14066 | Apollo 14 | rock | breccia | Sample 14066 was collected at Station F on the second EVA. The sample was found in the vicinity of Weird Crater. Sample was returned in documented bay 17N in ALSRC 1006. It is essentally a grab sample and is moderately friable with a blocky subround to subangular surface. It is very light gray in color with some large, darker gray clasts. |
14068 | Apollo 14 | rock | breccia | Sample 14068 was collected during the second EVA from station C1 and placed in bag number 10. It is one of the surface rocks collected while a gray layer, just under the surface, was samples 14140-14143; blocky, gray, coherent, holocrystalline, melt rock with less than 5% clasts. |
14069 | Apollo 14 | rock | breccia | Sample 14069 was collected at Station C1, 1.28 km ENE of the LM and 100 m SE of the rim of Cone Crater during the second EVA. The material at C1 appears to be material originally ejected from Cone Crater and re-ejected from a 30 m crater just south of Station C1 (Swann et al., 1977). Sample is block, gray, finely crystalline breccia with a sugary texture. |
14070 | Apollo 14 | rock | breccia | Sample 14070 was collected from Station C1, 1.28 km ENE of the LM, and 100 m SE of the rim of Cone Crater during the second EVA. It appears to have been ejected from Cone Crater that was later re-ejected from a 30 m crater in the vicinity (Swann et. al., 1977). This is a blocky, subangular, coherent, light gray, crystalline breccia that is similar to 14069. |
14071 | Apollo 14 | breccia | Sample 14071 was collected at Station C1 approximately 1.28 km ENE of LM and 100 m SE of Cone Crater. The area is locally flat with a slight southerly slope. The sample was collected amongst abundant debris ranging in size from the limit of resoution up to 75 cm. The photo-documented area was too disturbed to be able to see any intact craters. The sample was returned in documented bay 10N in ALSRC 1006. All the samples collected in the vicinity of 14071 are blocky and angular to subrounded with very rough surfaces. | |
14072 | Apollo 14 | rock | basalt | Sample 14072 was collected at Station C1 approximately 1.28 km ENE of LM and 100 m SE of Cone Crater. The area is locally flat but generally slopes slightly to the south. The area is strewn with debris which ranges in size from the limit of resoution up to 75 cm. The debris is mainly angular to subrounded. The entire area of photo documentation is too disturbed to see any intact craters. The sample was returned in documented bag 10N in ALSRC 1006. Sample is medium light gray basalt and is somewhat smooth in appearance. The shape is blocky to subrounded and the rock is extremely coherent. |
14075 | Apollo 14 | rock | Sample 14075 was collected at the bottom of the trench at Station G 230 m ESE of LM and 50 m E of North Triplet rim crust. The area is characterized by a nearly level regolith surface which is sparsely strewn by fragmental debris. The size of the debris varies from the limit of resolution to 60 cm. It is small, subangular, blocky rock chip of a moderately coherent fragmental rock with a moderately smooth surface. The color is a ight gray. The sample was returned I documented bag 20N in ALSRC 1006. | |
14076 | Apollo 14 | rock | breccia | Sample 14076 was collected at the bottom of the trench at Station G, 230 m ESE of LM and 50 m E of North Triplet rim crest. Area in general is nearly level and lightly strewn with debris. The size of the debris ranges from the limit of resolution up to 60 cm. There is a moderate amount of subhedral 20 to 50 cm craters. The sample was returned in documented bag 20N in ALSRC 1006 and is medium light gray in color. |
14077 | Apollo 14 | rock | basalt | Sample 14077 was collected at Station G locted 230 m ESE of LM and 50 m E of North Triplet rim crust. It was collected from the bottom of the trench sample. The general area is more or less level and sparsely covered with debris. The size of the debris ranges from limit of resolution of 60 cm. The area has a moderate abundance of 20 to 50 cm craters mot of which are subdued. It was returned in documented bag 20N in ALSRC 1006 and is a very light gray holocrystalline plagioclase-rich rock and is fine-grained and inequigranular. |
14438 | Apollo 14 | rock | Sample 141438 is a medium to light brownish gray, fragmental rock. | |
14301 | Apollo 14 | rock | breccia | Sample 14301 is one of two samples (14301 and 14313) collected at Station G1, 150 m east of the LM on the north rim crest of North Triplet Crater during the second EVA. According to the astronauts, the rock appeared to be similar to the other rocks in the area; these appear to be ejecta from North Triplet Crater. Except for samples dug from trenches, 14301 was the most deeply buried rock returned during the Apollo 14 mission (Swann et al., 1977). This sample was larger then anticipated, and was placed directly in weigh bag 1031 (?) by the astronauts. Sample 14301 is a moderately coherent, light medium gray, polymict breccia. It consists of at least 20% clasts larger than 1mm. |
14306 | Apollo 14 | rock | breccia | Sample 14306 is a fragmental rock collected at station G, 230 meters ESE of the lunar module (LM), and 50 meters E of the rrim crest of North Triplet Crater. It is said to be somewhat more tabular and less irregular than 60 cm boulder but similar to it in color and albedo. The lunar location and orientation are well documented. This sample is gray with ~25% white clasts and is blocky in shape. The rock is a coherent breccia. |
14309 | Apollo 14 | rock | breccia | Sample 14309 was collected sometime during the second EVA. No lunar-surface photographs were made, nor are the location and orientation known. The sample was returned in weight bag 1031 with other grap samples from EVA 2. Sample 14309 is a moderately friable, vitric matrix breccia. |
14312 | Apollo 14 | rock | breccia | Sample 14312 is a breccia collected from the top of Turtle Rock during EVA 2 at Station H. Its lunar orientation and location were well documented. Turkle Rock is the largest of several boulders at Station H, and the two rocks on it were nicknamed "turtle eggs", and collected as samples 14312 and 14319; rock is medium gray, coherent breccia which is partly covered with glass. |
14314 | Apollo 14 | rock | breccia | Sample 14314 is a breccia sample collected during the second EVA at Station H. It was collected from the fillet below Turtle Rock, 80 meters NW of the LM. The fillet slopes 2-3 degrees to the flat regolith and has abundant rocks up to 30 cm in size distributed in it. The rock is a friable breccia, medium to light gray on its fresh surface and dark brownish gray elsewhere. Approximately 40% of the surface is glass covered. |
14315 | Apollo 14 | breccia | Sample 14315 is a breccia collected from Station H (North Boulder Field) during EVA 2. Its lunar location is documented as bieing 15 m SE of Turtle Rock and 70 m NW of the LM, but the lunar orientation is tentative. It was returned in weight bag 1038. This coherent, gray breccia has a rounded surface and an angular flat underside. | |
14316 | Apollo 14 | rock | breccia | Sample 14316 is a breccia collected at Station H during EVA 2. It has not been identified in lunar surface photographs, so its exact lunar location and orientation are unknown. It was returned in weigh bag 1038. This rock is a medium gray, inhomogeneous, fragmental breccia with one flat face. There is a predominance of leucocratic clasts. |
14428 | Apollo 14 | rock | breccia | Sample 14428 is a vesicular breccia with a crystalline matrix. |
14429 | Apollo 14 | rock | breccia | Sample 14429 is a slightly vesicular polymict breccia similar to 14428. |
14430 | Apollo 14 | breccia | Sample 14430 is a medium to light gray, polymict breccia | |
14431 | Apollo 14 | rock | Sample 14431 is a light gray, crystalline rock | |
14435 | Apollo 14 | rock | Sample 14435 is a holocrystalline, equigranular, coherent rock which appears to have been freshly broken. | |
14436 | Apollo 14 | rock | Sample 14436 is a brownish gray sample which may be either an igneous rock or a dense, fine grained, fragmental rock. | |
14437 | Apollo 14 | rock | Sample 14437 is a fragmental rock with all grains smaller than 1 mm and no lithic fragments. | |
14442 | Apollo 14 | rock | Sample 14442 is a small, blocky, friable, medium gray fragment which resembles siltstone in appearance. | |
14445 | Apollo 14 | rock | breccia | Sample 14445 is a blocky, subangular, medium gray, hackly, polymict breccia with moderate cohesiveness. |
14449 | Apollo 14 | rock | Sample 14449 is a gray, friable, freshly broken chip of clastic rock. | |
15220 | Apollo 15 | soil | Sample 15220 was collected from the rim of the secondary impact crater made by the large rock at Station 2, about 1 meter northeast of the large rock. Samples 15210, 15220, and 15230 are all representative of the fine grained upper part of the regolith at Station 2. Except for the large boulder itself, the immediate sample area is underlain by sub-centimeter fines with a few scattered consolidated fragments no larger than 10 cm in diameter. | |
15230 | Apollo 15 | soil | Sample 15230 was collected at Station 2 from underneath the boulder which was rolled over by the crew. All soil samples collected at Station 2, 15210, 15220, and 15230 are representative of the fine grained upper part of the regolith at Station 2. Except for the large boulder itself, the immediate sample area is underlain by the sub centermeter fines whith a few scattered consolidated fragments no longer than 10 cm in diameter. | |
15430 | Apollo 15 | soil | Sample collected at Station 7, 5 meters inside of the north rim of Spur Crater. A clod and a soil were collected together as a surface sample. The clod tended to break down and degrade the size distribution for this soil. Station 7 was moderately well populated with rock fragments up to tens of centimeters across. | |
15250 | Apollo 15 | soil | Sample collected from the east rim of a 1m crater approximately 20 m southeast and upslope from the LRV at Station 6. The crater is marked by a concentration of fragments, primarily clods up to 10 cm in diameter, on an otherwise smooth, finely granular surface. It was described by the crew as a "fresh little crater" and it is superposed on the south wall of a subdued 3 m crater which has no visible ejecta material around it. Sample 15240 is collected from the floor of the same 1 m crater. | |
14452 | Apollo 14 | rock | Sample is a fine grained, gray, clastic rock. | |
14042 | Apollo 14 | rock | breccia | Samples 14041-14046 are fragments from a fractured clod tht broke apart when it was collected by Astronaut Mitchell, collected from Station A, 150 m NW of LM and 90 m N of North Triplet Crater; samples 14041, 14042, 14043, and 14045 are large enough to be considered rocks; sample 14044 is residue and sample 14046 is composed of chips and fines; placed in documented bag 3N and returned in ALSRC 1006. |
14041 | Apollo 14 | breccia | Samples 14041-14046 are fragments from a fractured clod tht broke apart when it was collected by Astronaut Mitchell, collected from Station A, 150 m NW of LM and 90 m N of North Triplet Crater; samples 14041, 14042, 14043, and 14045 are large enough to be considered rocks; sample 14044 is residue and sample 14046 is composed of chips and fines; placed in documented bag 3N and returned in ALSRC 1006. | |
14045 | Apollo 14 | breccia | Samples 14041-14046 are fragments from a fractured clod tht broke apart when it was collected by Astronaut Mitchell, collected from Station A, 150 m NW of LM and 90 m N of North Triplet Crater; samples 14041, 14042, 14043, and 14045 are large enough to be considered rocks; sample 14044 is residue and sample 14046 is composed of chips and fines; placed in documented bag 3N and returned in ALSRC 1006. | |
14074 | Apollo 14 | rock | basalt | Samples 14073, 14074, 14078, and 14079 came from the bottome of a trench taken at Station G, 230 m ESE of LM and 50 m E of North Triplet Rim Crust. The are is marked by a nearly level terrain with sparse amount of debris scattered throughout. The debris ranges in size from the limit of resolution up to 60 cm. There is a moderate abundance of subdued 20 to 50 cm craters in the area. All samples were returned in documented bag 20N in ALSRC 1006 and are very light gray, very coherent, holocrystalline, melt rocks. |
14079 | Apollo 14 | rock | basalt | Samples 14073, 14074, 14078, and 14079 came from the bottome of a trench taken at Station G, 230 m ESE of LM and 50 m E of North Triplet Rim Crust. The are is marked by a nearly level terrain with sparse amount of debris scattered throughout. The debris ranges in size from the limit of resolution up to 60 cm. There is a moderate abundance of subdued 20 to 50 cm craters in the area. All samples were returned in documented bag 20N in ALSRC 1006 and are very light gray, very coherent, holocrystalline, melt rocks. |
14078 | Apollo 14 | rock | basalt | Samples 14073, 14074, 14078, and 14079 came from the bottome of a trench taken at Station G, 230 m ESE of LM and 50 m E of North Triplet Rim Crust. The are is marked by a nearly level terrain with sparse amount of debris scattered throughout. The debris ranges in size from the limit of resolution up to 60 cm. There is a moderate abundance of subdued 20 to 50 cm craters in the area. All samples were returned in documented bag 20N in ALSRC 1006 and are very light gray, very coherent, holocrystalline, melt rocks. |
14073 | Apollo 14 | rock | basalt | Samples 14073, 14074, 14078, and 14079 came from the bottome of a trench taken at Station G, 230 m ESE of LM and 50 m E of North Triplet Rim Crust. The are is marked by a nearly level terrain with sparse amount of debris scattered throughout. The debris ranges in size from the limit of resolution up to 60 cm. There is a moderate abundance of subdued 20 to 50 cm craters in the area. All samples were returned in documented bag 20N in ALSRC 1006 and are very light gray, very coherent, holocrystalline, melt rocks. |
14081 | Apollo 14 | rock | Samples 14080 and 14081 were taken from the middle of the trench at Station G 230 m ESE of LM and 50 m E of the Triplet rim crust. The general area from where the sample was taken is characterized by a nearly level terrain sparsely scattered with debris. The size of the debris varies from the limit of resolution up to 60 cm. The area is also characterized by a moderate abundance of subdued 20 to 50 cm craters and were returned in documented bay 21N in ALSRC 1006. Both are light gray in color and very fine grained. The are both polymicts and contain abundant glass. Both are friable being made up of < 1 mm rock/soil fragments bonded by glass. They could be pieces of the sample but in their present state, they cannot be fitted together. | |
14080 | Apollo 14 | rock | Samples 14080 and 14081 were taken from the middle of the trench at Station G 230 m ESE of LM and 50 m E of the Triplet rim crust. The general area from where the sample was taken is characterized by a nearly level terrain sparsely scattered with debris. The size of the debris varies from the limit of resolution up to 60 cm. The area is also characterized by a moderate abundance of subdued 20 to 50 cm craters and were returned in documented bay 21N in ALSRC 1006. Both are light gray in color and very fine grained. The are both polymicts and contain abundant glass. Both are friable being made up of < 1 mm rock/soil fragments bonded by glass. They could be pieces of the sample but in their present state, they cannot be fitted together. | |
14083 | Apollo 14 | rock | breccia | Samples 14082/14083 are white rocks collected at Station C1, 1.24 km ENE of the LM and 17 m SE of the rim of Cone Crater. They are representative of one of the major rock types as seen in lunar photo documentation. The sample was chipped from the top of White Rock, a 1 m breccia boulder with consipicous 1 cm dark and light clasts in a very light gray matrix. This sample was placed in bag 13N and returned in ALSRC 1006. By the time it had arrived at the LRL, it had broken into two pieces and these were numbered 14082 and 14083. Sample 14082 was studied extensively by the Ibrium Consortium, from which much of this information is derived. Sample 14082/14083 is one of the white rocks. It is a polymict breccia with a very light gray matrix and darker lithic clasts. |
14082 | Apollo 14 | rock | breccia | Samples 14082/14083 are white rocks collected at Station C1, 1.24 km ENE of the LM and 17 m SE of the rim of Cone Crater. They are representative of one of the major rock types as seen in lunar photo documentation. The sample was chipped from the top of White Rock, a 1 m breccia boulder with consipicous 1 cm dark and light clasts in a very light gray matrix. This sample was placed in bag 13N and returned in ALSRC 1006. By the time it had arrived at the LRL, it had broken into two pieces and these were numbered 14082 and 14083. Sample 14082 was studied extensively by the Ibrium Consortium, from which much of this information is derived. Sample 14082/14083 is one of the white rocks. It is a polymict breccia with a very light gray matrix and darker lithic clasts. |
14141 | Apollo 14 | soil-general | soil | Samples 14140, 14141, 14142, 14143, 14144 and 14068, 14069, 14070, 14071, and 14072 were collected 3 meters from the rim of a 15 meter crater just south of Cone crater. 14141 is a surface soil identified by crew as a light gray layer, 14068 through 14072 is a sample of some surface rocks in the area. The area near the rim of Cone crater is strewn with boulders up to 3 meters. |
15090 | Apollo 15 | soil | Samples 15090 through 15093 and 15095 were collected near a large boulder at Station 2. The regolith is notable for its fine texture. Coherent fragments larger than a centimeter in diameter are scattered, and none larger than 10 cm in diameter occur within the immediate sample locality. The soil can be assumed representative of the mature, well gardened regolith composed of St. George crater ejecta plus whatever exotic components have been admixed since the St. George impact. | |
15214 | Apollo 15 | soil | Samples 15210 through 15214 are soil samples collected from the rim of the secondary impact crater made by the large rock at Station 2. Samples 15210 through 15214 lie on the south crater rim. 15210, 15220, and 15230 are all representative of the fine grained upper part of the regolith at Station 2. Except for the large boulder itself, the immediate sample area is underlain by sub-centimeter fines with a few scattered consolidated fragments no larger than 10 cm in diameter. | |
15213 | Apollo 15 | soil | Samples 15210 through 15214 are soil samples collected from the rim of the secondary impact crater made by the large rock at Station 2. Samples 15210 through 15214 lie on the south crater rim. 15210, 15220, and 15230 are all representative of the fine grained upper part of the regolith at Station 2. Except for the large boulder itself, the immediate sample area is underlain by sub-centimeter fines with a few scattered consolidated fragments no larger than 10 cm in diameter. | |
15212 | Apollo 15 | soil | Samples 15210 through 15214 are soil samples collected from the rim of the secondary impact crater made by the large rock at Station 2. Samples 15210 through 15214 lie on the south crater rim. 15210, 15220, and 15230 are all representative of the fine grained upper part of the regolith at Station 2. Except for the large boulder itself, the immediate sample area is underlain by sub-centimeter fines with a few scattered consolidated fragments no larger than 10 cm in diameter. | |
15210 | Apollo 15 | soil | Samples 15210 through 15214 are soil samples collected from the rim of the secondary impact crater made by the large rock at Station 2. Samples 15210 through 15214 lie on the south crater rim. 15210, 15220, and 15230 are all representative of the fine grained upper part of the regolith at Station 2. Except for the large boulder itself, the immediate sample area is underlain by sub-centimeter fines with a few scattered consolidated fragments no larger than 10 cm in diameter. | |
15243 | Apollo 15 | soil | Samples 15240 through 15245 and 15250 through 15255 were collected from the floor and rim respectively of a 1m crater 20m upslope of the LRV at Station 6. The crew described the crater as a "fresh little crater" and noted a concentration of clods up to 10 cm on an otherwise smooth, fine grained surface. Approximately half of the sample collected here are pieces of glassy breccia >1cm not included as part of the soil (15245). There are only a few fragments >1cm in the area surrounding the crater, and all other craters in the area are subdued. The general slope of the area dips 10 degrees to the north. | |
15241 | Apollo 15 | soil | Samples 15240 through 15245 and 15250 through 15255 were collected from the floor and rim respectively of a 1m crater 20m upslope of the LRV at Station 6. The crew described the crater as a "fresh little crater" and noted a concentration of clods up to 10 cm on an otherwise smooth, fine grained surface. Approximately half of the sample collected here are pieces of glassy breccia >1cm not included as part of the soil (15245). There are only a few fragments >1cm in the area surrounding the crater, and all other craters in the area are subdued. The general slope of the area dips 10 degrees to the north. | |
15240 | Apollo 15 | soil | Samples 15240 through 15245 and 15250 through 15255 were collected from the floor and rim respectively of a 1m crater 20m upslope of the LRV at Station 6. The crew described the crater as a "fresh little crater" and noted a concentration of clods up to 10 cm on an otherwise smooth, fine grained surface. Approximately half of the sample collected here are pieces of glassy breccia >1cm not included as part of the soil (15245). There are only a few fragments >1cm in the area surrounding the crater, and all other craters in the area are subdued. The general slope of the area dips 10 degrees to the north. | |
15245 | Apollo 15 | soil-general | regolith breccia | Samples 15240 through 15245 and 15250 through 15255 were collected from the floor and rim respectively of a 1m crater 20m upslope of the LRV at Station 6. The crew described the crater as a "fresh little crater" and noted a concentration of clods up to 10 cm on an otherwise smooth, fine grained surface. Approximately half of the sample collected here are pieces of glassy breccia >1cm not included as part of the soil (15245). There are only a few fragments >1cm in the area surrounding the crater, and all other craters in the area are subdued. The general slope of the area dips 10 degrees to the north. |
15244 | Apollo 15 | soil | Samples 15240 through 15245 and 15250 through 15255 were collected from the floor and rim respectively of a 1m crater 20m upslope of the LRV at Station 6. The crew described the crater as a "fresh little crater" and noted a concentration of clods up to 10 cm on an otherwise smooth, fine grained surface. Approximately half of the sample collected here are pieces of glassy breccia >1cm not included as part of the soil (15245). There are only a few fragments >1cm in the area surrounding the crater, and all other craters in the area are subdued. The general slope of the area dips 10 degrees to the north. | |
15242 | Apollo 15 | soil | Samples 15240 through 15245 and 15250 through 15255 were collected from the floor and rim respectively of a 1m crater 20m upslope of the LRV at Station 6. The crew described the crater as a "fresh little crater" and noted a concentration of clods up to 10 cm on an otherwise smooth, fine grained surface. Approximately half of the sample collected here are pieces of glassy breccia >1cm not included as part of the soil (15245). There are only a few fragments >1cm in the area surrounding the crater, and all other craters in the area are subdued. The general slope of the area dips 10 degrees to the north. | |
15285 | Apollo 15 | regolith breccia | Samples 15285 through 15288 (and 15268) were all collected from the rim of a small crater at station 6 and returned in the same bag. They are breccia fragments from the same location as 15265. Consist of all components of the soils in a fragmental, perhaps partly glassy matrix and contains, besides ophitic and intersertal basalts, plagioclase breccias, troctolites, noritic fragments, glass and individual mineral grains. | |
15270 | Apollo 15 | soil | Sample was a large soil sample collected from the compressed wheel track behind the LRV which was parked on a slope of 10-15 degres toward the north. The adjacent undisturbed soil surface appears to be typical of the coarsely granular texture at Station 6. The immediate vicinity is 5-7% covered by centimeter size clods, and is lacking in fresh craters or coherent looking rock fragments. | |
15100 | Apollo 15 | rake | soil | Sample was collected at the rake sample site 5m east of the large rock at Station 2. The mature fine grained regolith with a few scattered fragments up to about 10 cm in diameter is characteristic of the entire Station 2 area and presumably represents intensely gardened St. George ejecta to which some ejecta from impacts elsewhere in the Apennine Mountains and Imbrium basin have been added. This sample has not been studied. |
67940 | Apollo 16 | breccia | shielded soil from E-W split in House Rock | |
78235 | Apollo 17 | rock | norite | Shocked Norite |
78255 | Apollo 17 | rock | norite | Shocked Norite |
78238 | Apollo 17 | rock | norite | Shocked Norite, piece from norite 78235 |
78236 | Apollo 17 | rock | norite | Shocked Norite, piece of norite 78235 |
10059 | Apollo 11 | rock | breccia | Slightly devitrified typical breccia with relatively low lithic clast content |
67747 | Apollo 16 | rake | basalt | small aluminous basalt with measured age of 3.86 b.y. Elongate plagioclase and pyroxene laths are poikilitically enclosed in large olivine. Glassy mesostasis is found adjacent to pyroxene. |
65749 | Apollo 16 | rake | small brown soil breccia, seriate grain size distribution, with glass in the matrix | |
65745 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | small brown soil breccia, seriate grain size distribution, with glass in the matrix |
65746 | Apollo 16 | rake | small brown soil breccia, seriate grain size distribution, with glass in the matrix | |
65747 | Apollo 16 | rake | small brown soil breccia, seriate grain size distribution, with glass in the matrix | |
65748 | Apollo 16 | rake | small brown soil breccia, seriate grain size distribution, with glass in the matrix | |
65755 | Apollo 16 | rake | small brown soil breccia, seriate grain size distribution, with glass in the matrix | |
65756 | Apollo 16 | rake | small brown soil breccia, seriate grain size distribution, with glass in the matrix | |
67756 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | small chalky white particle, plagioclase rich breccia, with minerals that seem to have equilibrated - hence it is called "recrystallized". |
61225 | Apollo 16 | impact melt breccia | small chip of white material covered with chalky-white dust on most sides | |
63535 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | small fragments of Impact Melt Rock - some with finegrained basaltic texture; there are numerous small relic clasts that are incorporated in the matrix |
63537 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | small fragments of Impact Melt Rock - some with finegrained basaltic texture; there are numerous small relic clasts that are incorporated in the matrix |
63536 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | small fragments of Impact Melt Rock - some with finegrained basaltic texture; there are numerous small relic clasts that are incorporated in the matrix |
63566 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | small glass sample has relatively large white inclusions |
63575 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | small glass sample has relatively large white inclusions |
68519 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | small lithic fragment had a glass coat that has been partially chipped away by micrometeorite bombardment. |
60659 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | small polymict breccias, contains a number of feldspar-rich clasts in a coherent matrix |
14063 | Apollo 14 | rock | breccia | So-Called "White Rocks"; friable with dark clasts (Wilshire and Jackson 1972); annealed or slightly annealed, feldspathic Fra Mauro breccia (Chao et al 1972); "white rock breccia" (Quaide and Wrigley 1972); |
12044 | Apollo 12 | soil-general | Soil 12044 and rock 12043 were collected from the south rim of Surveyor crater. Astronauts observed a prominent double glass bead on the surface. | |
15070 | Apollo 15 | soil | Soil 15070, rock sample 15075, and rock sample 15076 were taken from a small area about 25 m east of the rim of Elbow crater at Station 1. The samples were taken as the middle part of a three part radial sample of the ejecta blanket of Elbow crater. The soil and two rock samples were placed in the same sample bag. | |
15086 | Apollo 15 | regolith breccia | Soil 15080 and two cobble-sized rocks, 15085 and 15086, were collected at Station 1 about 65 m east of the Elbow crater ejecta rim. This collection was the farthest from the rim of the three part radial sample of ejecta blanket. In the local area of this sample, the general ejecta blanket appears smooth with scattered cobble sized rocks. A chip from friable breccia 15086 was put through freeze-thaw cycling and ultrasonic vibration to disaggregate, then sieved. | |
15200 | Apollo 15 | soil | Soil 15200 and fragments 15201 through 15206 were broken from the 1 m boulder at Station 2. The boulder appears to be an ejecta fragment from a relatively recent impact of another site. The boulder may have impacted at a low angle and rolled uphill onto the rim of its own secondary crater. Sample area is generally flat and free of fragments. Carrier notes that this is an unrepresenative collection of rock chips and loose soils found at the bootm of a sample bag. | |
15400 | Apollo 15 | soil | Soil 15400 and green breccia 15405 were collected from the singular rounded 3 meter long boulder and from an apparent fillet developed high on the south side of the boulder. Relatively few fragments occur in the vicinity of the rock. Most are angular and lie on the fillet, but sparse fragments are found with random distribution in all directions. The samples are probably representative of the boulder and its disintegration products which may typify the composition of its fillet. | |
15470 | Apollo 15 | soil | Soil 15470 and basalts 15475, 15476 and gabbro 15495 were collected at Station 4, 28 m southeast of the rim crest of Dune crater. The surface surrounding the samples has a moderate cover of fragments, small craters in the sample area are sparse. Two large fragments in the sample were excluded from grain size analysis. | |
15475 | Apollo 15 | basalt | Soil 15470 and basalts 15475, 15476 and gabbro 15495 were collected at Station 4, 28 m southeast of the rim crest of Dune crater. The surface surrounding the samples has a moderate cover of fragments, small craters in the sample area are sparse. Two large fragments in the sample were excluded from grain size analysis. | |
15476 | Apollo 15 | basalt | Soil 15470 and basalts 15475, 15476 and gabbro 15495 were collected at Station 4, 28 m southeast of the rim crest of Dune crater. The surface surrounding the samples has a moderate cover of fragments, small craters in the sample area are sparse. Two large fragments in the sample were excluded from grain size analysis. | |
15495 | Apollo 15 | basalt | Soil 15470 and basalts 15475, 15476 and gabbro 15495 were collected at Station 4, 28 m southeast of the rim crest of Dune crater. The surface surrounding the samples has a moderate cover of fragments, small craters in the sample area are sparse. Two large fragments in the sample were excluded from grain size analysis. It has been studied for its magnetic properties, but has not been dated. The orientation of 15495 was documented by photographs, but there are micrometeorite craters on S, T, B and E surfaces indicating that the rock has rolled. | |
64420 | Apollo 16 | rake | soil | Soil 64420 was collected with breccia 64475 at Station 4A near Cinco B crater, 5 meters from the LRV on the floor of a subdued 15 meter crater. The soil was taken from the bottom of a 25 cm trench. At the sample area, 5-10 cm pebbles are abundant, 20-40 cm cobbles are common and meter size blocks are sparsely scattered. Scattered craters up to several meters in size are common in the general area. This regolith is probably South Ray ejecta mixed with underlying Descartes material. |
64500 | Apollo 16 | rake | soil | Soil 64500 and rake 64510 were collected at Station 4A in the vicinity of Cinco B crater,. The sample area slopes 10-15 degrees to the northwest off Stone Mountain, surface fragments up to 10 cm are abundant, up to 40 cm are common, up to 1 meter sparse. Scattered craters .5 to several meters are in the general area, very subdued and barely visible smaller craters are in the local area. The gray surface is underlain by a white layer. |
65500 | Apollo 16 | soil | Soil 65500 accompanies rake sample 65510. The sample area has no blocks larger tha 30 cm, it is a mostly sandy surface. The fines are loose with a gray surface and whitish subsurface. Numerous small craters are superposed on the 20 meter crater. Friable clods are included in the sample. | |
68500 | Apollo 16 | soil | Soil 68500 accompanied rake sample 68510 at Station 8, on the north rim of a 10-15 meter crater in the vicinity of visible rays from South Ray crater. Astronauts reported several glass fragments scattered over the surface in this area, some reflecting red and green in the sunlight. The sample area is generally free of large rocks. | |
71500 | Apollo 17 | soil | Soil 71500 and 6 rock fragments were collected at Station 1A 15 meters northeast of the rim of a blocky 10 meter crater. It was collected as the reference to rake sample 71520 - 71597. The sample area is flat and essentially free of large fragments. The fines are fairly compact, there are 3 .5 meter craters in the sample area. The soil is scooped from the edge of a subdued crater in an area mostly free of surface rocks and small craters. | |
72500 | Apollo 17 | soil | Soil 72500 and rake sample 72530-72559 were collected at Station 2 near the base of South Massif a few meters from the rim of Nansen crater. Boulders up to 2 meters are common in the general area, but fragments larger than 25 cm are sparse in the raked area. The soil was sampled to a depth of 4 cm. | |
72700 | Apollo 17 | soil | Soil 72700 and rake samples 72735-38 were collected at Station 2 in a light mantle unit near the base of South Massif slightly upslope from Nansen crater. The area has an undulating slope towards the southeast, fragments up to 3 cm are sparsely distributed in the rake area, and craters up to 5 meters are common in the general area. The sample was collected to a depth of 5 cm. | |
74246 | Apollo 17 | rock | breccia | Soil Breccia |
78465 | Apollo 17 | rock | breccia | Soil Breccia |
78555 | Apollo 17 | rake | breccia | Soil Breccia |
70019 | Apollo 17 | rock | breccia | Soil Breccia - Agglutinate |
78549 | Apollo 17 | rake | other | Soil Clod, friable soil breccia |
78548 | Apollo 17 | rake | other | Soil Clod, friable soil breccia |
65510 | Apollo 16 | rake | soil | soil clods |
65501 | Apollo 16 | rake | soil | soil clods |
78220 | Apollo 17 | soil | Soil collected from beneath a .5 meter gabbroic boulder at Station 8, near the base of Sculptured Hills, south of Wessex Cleft. The site slopes moderately steeply to the southwest, with scattered pebbles, clods, small rocks and one boulder. The surface is saturated with 1 cm craters, larger craters are present but not abundant. | |
15012 | Apollo 15 | soil | Soil collected with rock fragments 15260 through 15264 from the bottom of a trench dug into the south rim of a 12 m cratr at Station 6. The rim of this crater is asymmetric; the north rim is hard, granular, and littered with fragments, and the south rim is softer and smoother. | |
61240 | Apollo 16 | soil | Soil color is listed as light olive gray but mission transcripts state, "I just had a good scoopful, and I lost it. Let me dig out a little - another little trench. There she be. Coming up all white. That's all that's in there John." | |
61220 | Apollo 16 | rake | soil | Soil color is listed as light olive gray but mission transcripts state, "I just had a good scoopful, and I lost it. Let me dig out a little - another little trench. There she be. Coming up all white. That's all that's in there John." |
66040 | Apollo 16 | soil | Soils 66040 and 66030 and breccia 66055 were collected at the same location at Station 6. It is supposed that the breccia is local ejecta, but the source crater is not obvious. In the sample area 15-30 cm blocks are relatively common, soil is relatively firm compared to the looser regolith at Stations 4 and 5. Craters in the area are mostly <5 meters. | |
15290 | Apollo 15 | soil | Soil sample 15290 was collected with fine grained breccia 15295 10 to 15 meters south of the LRV. Soil 15290 includes soil from the immediate area and possible some fragments from 15295 which may have disintegrated in transit and handling into additional fines. This comminution of the breccia enriches the large size fractions of this soil and degrades the pristinity of the grain size distribution. | |
15311 | Apollo 15 | rake | Soil sample 15310 was collected as part of a large rake sample and may contain material rubbed off of the friable rocks collected by the rake. On the other hand, it is certain to also contain some soil collected by the rake and/or attached to the rocks. In any case 15311 is a large soil sample that goes along with 15301 and it has about the same composition.. The fines from this sample have not been characterized. | |
12041 | Apollo 12 | soil-general | Soil sample collected about 50 m east of the rim of Bench crater. Sample consists mostly of ine particles but includes a 6.4 mm glass sphere. | |
12037 | Apollo 12 | basalt | Soil sample in same sample bag as 12036, a friable basalt. Both were collected near the site of 12035 on the NW rim of Bench crater. Because it includes much broken material from the friable basalt, it is not statistically a soil sample. | |
68515 | Apollo 16 | rake | Steele and Smith (1973) refer to it as a "complex, black and white breccia with some devitrified glass". | |
10070 | Apollo 11 | rock | breccia | Subangular, dark grey, partly devitrified fine breccia with many small lithic clasts and few large clasts |
10067 | Apollo 11 | rock | breccia | Sub-angular, dark grey, partly devitrified microbreccia with low glass content |
10063 | Apollo 11 | rock | breccia | Sub-angular, dark grey, partly devitrified typical breccia with relatively high glass clast content |
10093 | Apollo 11 | rock | breccia | Subangular, medium dark grey, fine breccia |
10075 | Apollo 11 | rock | breccia | Subangular, medium grey, partly devitrified fine breccia |
10094 | Apollo 11 | rock | breccia | Subangular to subrounded, medium dark grey breccia |
67637 | Apollo 16 | rake | subrounded, chalky-white, homogeneous sample with apparent cataclastic texture and appears to be a piece of 67635. | |
10023 | Apollo 11 | rock | breccia | Sub-rounded, medium dark gray, fine breccia |
73120 | Apollo 17 | soil | Surface sample 73120 was collected near trench sample 73140 at Station 2A, about 750 meters north-northeast of Station 2 at the base of South Massif on the light mantle deposits. The site is generally level, with fragments >5cm sparse and craters >10 cm sparse. | |
12032 | Apollo 12 | soil-general | Surface soil 12032, along with several rocks were collected from the north rim of Bench crater. It includes some light gray material from just below the surace. Soil collected with "potato" rock 12053. | |
15271 | Apollo 15 | soil | Surface soil 15271 was collected from the rover track as part of the soil mechanics experiment and contains numerous friable "soil breccias" which may be compressed material from the rover track | |
64800 | Apollo 16 | soil | Surface soil 64800 accompanies rake 64810, collected at Station 4B . Blocks and cobbles cover 80-90% of the northeast wall of the main crater, elsewhere the surface is relatively smooth with scattered cobbles. The fines are loose, numerous small crates are found in the sample area. | |
76320 | Apollo 17 | soil | Surface soil collected at Station 6 on flat face of boulder 1. The site slopes 10 degrees to the north with fragments up to 5 cm scattered about. A few 5-10 cm crataers are found in the area. | |
14260 | Apollo 14 | soil | Surface soil sample is part of comprehensive sample collected 110 WNW of LM with 14165 through 14189, 14250 through 14289, 14298 through 14300 and 14421. All samples, including many walnut sized rocks were collected within a 4 m circle drawn by Astronaut Shepard. 14260 was collected from the top 1 cm of an undisturbed region with this circle. Area is generally level and free of boulders. | |
12018 | Apollo 12 | rock | basalt | (terrestrial analogue) medium grained gabbro |
15307 | Apollo 15 | breccia | The Apollo 15 catalog states: "15307 is a fragile, hollow glass sphere, with a lip. It is dark green/black. Its surface is smooth with very few zap pits. One side is shiny; the other dusty. The sample is broken slightly, revealing its hollowness, and at least where it is broken the walls are thin. It has never been processed or allocated. It was observed by the astronauts on the lunar surface and put in the container with soil". | |
15299 | Apollo 15 | rock | regolith breccia | The bulk sample is brownish, with small white clasts. It is a coherent soil breccia with inclusions of glass found in the regolith (McKay et al. 1989). Fractures have slickensides. |
10084 | Apollo 11 | soil-general | The contingency sample was taken in front of quad IV of the LM. The documented sample was collected 5 meters north of the LM, the bulk sample was collected in front of quad IV by pouring scoops of loose soil to fill the voids left between rock samples in the bulk sample container. 10084 is the bulk soil sample. Soil is fine grained and hard in this sample area. There are few fragments and it is difficult to scoop deeper than 5 cm below the surface. | |
60005 | Apollo 16 | core | The deep drill string was separated into two sections of three stems each on the lunar surface (60007, 60006 and 60005) and (60004, 60003, 60002 and 60001bit). | |
60001 | Apollo 16 | core | The deep drill string was separated into two sections of three stems each on the lunar surface (60007, 60006 and 60005) and (60004, 60003, 60002 and 60001bit). | |
60002 | Apollo 16 | core | The deep drill string was separated into two sections of three stems each on the lunar surface (60007, 60006 and 60005) and (60004, 60003, 60002 and 60001bit). | |
60003 | Apollo 16 | core | The deep drill string was separated into two sections of three stems each on the lunar surface (60007, 60006 and 60005) and (60004, 60003, 60002 and 60001bit). | |
60004 | Apollo 16 | core | The deep drill string was separated into two sections of three stems each on the lunar surface (60007, 60006 and 60005) and (60004, 60003, 60002 and 60001bit). | |
15425 | Apollo 15 | soil-general | breccia | The green glass clods (15425, 15426 and 15427) are partially light-greenish-gray and partly grayish-brown - it is the greener parts that have been studied. |
15426 | Apollo 15 | soil-general | breccia | The green glass clods (15425, 15426 and 15427) are partially light-greenish-gray and partly grayish-brown - it is the greener parts that have been studied. |
15427 | Apollo 15 | soil-general | breccia | The green glass clods (15425, 15426 and 15427) are partially light-greenish-gray and partly grayish-brown - it is the greener parts that have been studied. |
15616 | Apollo 15 | rake | basalt | Their chemical composition is that of an olivine-normative basalt, but olivine does not form obvious phenocrysts. |
15601 | Apollo 15 | soil | The large soil sample and the adjacent rake sample contained many olivine-normative basalt samples (156xx). Only about 2/3 of the soil sample was sieved, with about 400 grams remaining unsieved. Small rocks are described separately | |
60017 | Apollo 16 | rock | impact melt breccia | The outer surface has a thick patina, while the freshly broken surface is hackly |
14299 | Apollo 14 | The purpose of the Comprehensive Sample (14169-14188; 14250-14299) was to acquire a statistically significant set of small rock samples to petrographically characterize the distribution of rock types in the lunar regolith. The sample location was selected 100 to 125 m west of the LM. A two to three meter diameter circle was marked and all of the walnut sized rocks on the surface within the circle were collected with tongs. | ||
14258 | Apollo 14 | The purpose of the Comprehensive Sample (14169-14188; 14250-14299) was to acquire a statistically significant set of small rock samples to petrographically characterize the distribution of rock types in the lunar regolith. The sample location was selected 100 to 125 m west of the LM. A two to three meter diameter circle was marked and all of the walnut sized rocks on the surface within the circle were collected with tongs. | ||
14298 | Apollo 14 | The purpose of the Comprehensive Sample (14169-14188; 14250-14299) was to acquire a statistically significant set of small rock samples to petrographically characterize the distribution of rock types in the lunar regolith. The sample location was selected 100 to 125 m west of the LM. A two to three meter diameter circle was marked and all of the walnut sized rocks on the surface within the circle were collected with tongs. | ||
14293 | Apollo 14 | soil | The purpose of the Comprehensive Sample (14169-14188; 14250-14299) was to acquire a statistically significant set of small rock samples to petrographically characterize the distribution of rock types in the lunar regolith. The sample location was selected 100 to 125 m west of the LM. A two to three meter diameter circle was marked and all of the walnut sized rocks on the surface within the circle were collected with tongs. | |
14292 | Apollo 14 | soil | The purpose of the Comprehensive Sample (14169-14188; 14250-14299) was to acquire a statistically significant set of small rock samples to petrographically characterize the distribution of rock types in the lunar regolith. The sample location was selected 100 to 125 m west of the LM. A two to three meter diameter circle was marked and all of the walnut sized rocks on the surface within the circle were collected with tongs. | |
14291 | Apollo 14 | soil | The purpose of the Comprehensive Sample (14169-14188; 14250-14299) was to acquire a statistically significant set of small rock samples to petrographically characterize the distribution of rock types in the lunar regolith. The sample location was selected 100 to 125 m west of the LM. A two to three meter diameter circle was marked and all of the walnut sized rocks on the surface within the circle were collected with tongs. | |
14290 | Apollo 14 | soil | The purpose of the Comprehensive Sample (14169-14188; 14250-14299) was to acquire a statistically significant set of small rock samples to petrographically characterize the distribution of rock types in the lunar regolith. The sample location was selected 100 to 125 m west of the LM. A two to three meter diameter circle was marked and all of the walnut sized rocks on the surface within the circle were collected with tongs. | |
14263 | Apollo 14 | The purpose of the Comprehensive Sample (14169-14188; 14250-14299) was to acquire a statistically significant set of small rock samples to petrographically characterize the distribution of rock types in the lunar regolith. The sample location was selected 100 to 125 m west of the LM. A two to three meter diameter circle was marked and all of the walnut sized rocks on the surface within the circle were collected with tongs. | ||
14256 | Apollo 14 | The purpose of the Comprehensive Sample (14169-14188; 14250-14299) was to acquire a statistically significant set of small rock samples to petrographically characterize the distribution of rock types in the lunar regolith. The sample location was selected 100 to 125 m west of the LM. A two to three meter diameter circle was marked and all of the walnut sized rocks on the surface within the circle were collected with tongs. | ||
14261 | Apollo 14 | The purpose of the Comprehensive Sample (14169-14188; 14250-14299) was to acquire a statistically significant set of small rock samples to petrographically characterize the distribution of rock types in the lunar regolith. The sample location was selected 100 to 125 m west of the LM. A two to three meter diameter circle was marked and all of the walnut sized rocks on the surface within the circle were collected with tongs. | ||
14257 | Apollo 14 | The purpose of the Comprehensive Sample (14169-14188; 14250-14299) was to acquire a statistically significant set of small rock samples to petrographically characterize the distribution of rock types in the lunar regolith. The sample location was selected 100 to 125 m west of the LM. A two to three meter diameter circle was marked and all of the walnut sized rocks on the surface within the circle were collected with tongs. | ||
14250 | Apollo 14 | The purpose of the Comprehensive Sample (14169-14188; 14250-14299) was to acquire a statistically significant set of small rock samples to petrographically characterize the distribution of rock types in the lunar regolith. The sample location was selected 100 to 125 m west of the LM. A two to three meter diameter circle was marked and all of the walnut sized rocks on the surface within the circle were collected with tongs. Sample 14250 is a medium gray, blocky, subangular, moderately friable, seriate fragmental rock. | ||
14251 | Apollo 14 | The purpose of the Comprehensive Sample (14169-14188; 14250-14299) was to acquire a statistically significant set of small rock samples to petrographically characterize the distribution of rock types in the lunar regolith. The sample location was selected 100 to 125 m west of the LM. A two to three meter diameter circle was marked and all of the walnut sized rocks on the surface within the circle were collected with tongs. Sample 14251 is a medium gray, blocky, friable, fragmental rock. | ||
14252 | Apollo 14 | rock | The purpose of the Comprehensive Sample (14169-14188; 14250-14299) was to acquire a statistically significant set of small rock samples to petrographically characterize the distribution of rock types in the lunar regolith. The sample location was selected 100 to 125 m west of the LM. A two to three meter diameter circle was marked and all of the walnut sized rocks on the surface within the circle were collected with tongs. Sample 14252 is a medium gray, friable, fragmental rock. It is subround to angular, appearing to be 1/4 of a sphere. | |
14253 | Apollo 14 | rock | breccia | The purpose of the Comprehensive Sample (14169-14188; 14250-14299) was to acquire a statistically significant set of small rock samples to petrographically characterize the distribution of rock types in the lunar regolith. The sample location was selected 100 to 125 m west of the LM. A two to three meter diameter circle was marked and all of the walnut sized rocks on the surface within the circle were collected with tongs. Sample 14253 is a gray, angular, block, homogeneous, crystalline breccia. |
14254 | Apollo 14 | rock | soil | The purpose of the Comprehensive Sample (14169-14188; 14250-14299) was to acquire a statistically significant set of small rock samples to petrographically characterize the distribution of rock types in the lunar regolith. The sample location was selected 100 to 125 m west of the LM. A two to three meter diameter circle was marked and all of the walnut sized rocks on the surface within the circle were collected with tongs. Sample 14254 is gray soil, adhering to frothy black glass and is highly irregular in shape. |
14255 | Apollo 14 | rock | breccia | The purpose of the Comprehensive Sample (14169-14188; 14250-14299) was to acquire a statistically significant set of small rock samples to petrographically characterize the distribution of rock types in the lunar regolith. The sample location was selected 100 to 125 m west of the LM. A two to three meter diameter circle was marked and all of the walnut sized rocks on the surface within the circle were collected with tongs. Sample 14255 is a medium gray, subangular, blocky, friable fragmental rock. |
14264 | Apollo 14 | rock | breccia | The purpose of the Comprehensive Sample (14169-14188; 14250-14299) was to acquire a statistically significant set of small rock samples to petrographically characterize the distribution of rock types in the lunar regolith. The sample location was selected 100 to 125 m west of the LM. A two to three meter diameter circle was marked and all of the walnut sized rocks on the surface within the circle were collected with tongs. Sample 14264 is a dark gray, blocky, tough fragmental rock, described by Phinney et al. (1975) as a vitric (matrix) breccia. |
14265 | Apollo 14 | rock | breccia | The purpose of the Comprehensive Sample (14169-14188; 14250-14299) was to acquire a statistically significant set of small rock samples to petrographically characterize the distribution of rock types in the lunar regolith. The sample location was selected 100 to 125 m west of the LM. A two to three meter diameter circle was marked and all of the walnut sized rocks on the surface within the circle were collected with tongs. Sample 14265 is angular, with half the surface coated with dark greenish gray to black glass. The rock is a medium dark gray, coherent fragmental rock. |
14266 | Apollo 14 | rock | breccia | The purpose of the Comprehensive Sample (14169-14188; 14250-14299) was to acquire a statistically significant set of small rock samples to petrographically characterize the distribution of rock types in the lunar regolith. The sample location was selected 100 to 125 m west of the LM. A two to three meter diameter circle was marked and all of the walnut sized rocks on the surface within the circle were collected with tongs. Sample 14266 is a light medium gray, rounded, slabby, tough, fragmental matrix, polymict breccia. |
14267 | Apollo 14 | rock | breccia | The purpose of the Comprehensive Sample (14169-14188; 14250-14299) was to acquire a statistically significant set of small rock samples to petrographically characterize the distribution of rock types in the lunar regolith. The sample location was selected 100 to 125 m west of the LM. A two to three meter diameter circle was marked and all of the walnut sized rocks on the surface within the circle were collected with tongs. Sample 14267 is a blocky, angular, dark gray, tough, vitric (matrix) breccia. |
14268 | Apollo 14 | rock | breccia | The purpose of the Comprehensive Sample (14169-14188; 14250-14299) was to acquire a statistically significant set of small rock samples to petrographically characterize the distribution of rock types in the lunar regolith. The sample location was selected 100 to 125 m west of the LM. A two to three meter diameter circle was marked and all of the walnut sized rocks on the surface within the circle were collected with tongs. Sample 14268 is described by Phinney et al. (1975) as a blocky, medium dark gray, vitric (matrix) breccia. |
14269 | Apollo 14 | rock | breccia | The purpose of the Comprehensive Sample (14169-14188; 14250-14299) was to acquire a statistically significant set of small rock samples to petrographically characterize the distribution of rock types in the lunar regolith. The sample location was selected 100 to 125 m west of the LM. A two to three meter diameter circle was marked and all of the walnut sized rocks on the surface within the circle were collected with tongs. Sample 14269 is a dark medium gray, frgmental microbreccia with one rounded side. |
14270 | Apollo 14 | rock | breccia | The purpose of the Comprehensive Sample (14169-14188; 14250-14299) was to acquire a statistically significant set of small rock samples to petrographically characterize the distribution of rock types in the lunar regolith. The sample location was selected 100 to 125 m west of the LM. A two to three meter diameter circle was marked and all of the walnut sized rocks on the surface within the circle were collected with tongs. Sample 14270 is a blocky, medium greenish gray fine-grained crystalline breccia. |
14271 | Apollo 14 | rock | breccia | The purpose of the Comprehensive Sample (14169-14188; 14250-14299) was to acquire a statistically significant set of small rock samples to petrographically characterize the distribution of rock types in the lunar regolith. The sample location was selected 100 to 125 m west of the LM. A two to three meter diameter circle was marked and all of the walnut sized rocks on the surface within the circle were collected with tongs. Sample 14271 is a blocky, dark medium vitric (matrix) breccia with light gray clasts. |
14272 | Apollo 14 | rock | breccia | The purpose of the Comprehensive Sample (14169-14188; 14250-14299) was to acquire a statistically significant set of small rock samples to petrographically characterize the distribution of rock types in the lunar regolith. The sample location was selected 100 to 125 m west of the LM. A two to three meter diameter circle was marked and all of the walnut sized rocks on the surface within the circle were collected with tongs. Sample 14272 is a blocky medium dark gray coherent vitric (matrix) breccia. |
14273 | Apollo 14 | rock | breccia | The purpose of the Comprehensive Sample (14169-14188; 14250-14299) was to acquire a statistically significant set of small rock samples to petrographically characterize the distribution of rock types in the lunar regolith. The sample location was selected 100 to 125 m west of the LM. A two to three meter diameter circle was marked and all of the walnut sized rocks on the surface within the circle were collected with tongs. Sample 14273 is a medium dark gray, vitric (matrix) breccia. |
14274 | Apollo 14 | rock | breccia | The purpose of the Comprehensive Sample (14169-14188; 14250-14299) was to acquire a statistically significant set of small rock samples to petrographically characterize the distribution of rock types in the lunar regolith. The sample location was selected 100 to 125 m west of the LM. A two to three meter diameter circle was marked and all of the walnut sized rocks on the surface within the circle were collected with tongs. Sample 14274 is a light medium gray, blocky, tough, crystalline, polymict breccia. |
14275 | Apollo 14 | rock | breccia | The purpose of the Comprehensive Sample (14169-14188; 14250-14299) was to acquire a statistically significant set of small rock samples to petrographically characterize the distribution of rock types in the lunar regolith. The sample location was selected 100 to 125 m west of the LM. A two to three meter diameter circle was marked and all of the walnut sized rocks on the surface within the circle were collected with tongs. Sample 14275 is a medium light gray, blocky, polymict breccia. |
14276 | Apollo 14 | rock | basalt | The purpose of the Comprehensive Sample (14169-14188; 14250-14299) was to acquire a statistically significant set of small rock samples to petrographically characterize the distribution of rock types in the lunar regolith. The sample location was selected 100 to 125 m west of the LM. A two to three meter diameter circle was marked and all of the walnut sized rocks on the surface within the circle were collected with tongs. Sample 14276 is a brownish-gray, blocky, coherent, medium-grained, crystalline rock. |
14277 | Apollo 14 | rock | breccia | The purpose of the Comprehensive Sample (14169-14188; 14250-14299) was to acquire a statistically significant set of small rock samples to petrographically characterize the distribution of rock types in the lunar regolith. The sample location was selected 100 to 125 m west of the LM. A two to three meter diameter circle was marked and all of the walnut sized rocks on the surface within the circle were collected with tongs. Sample 14277 is a dark gray, blocky, coherent vitric (matrix) breccia. |
14278 | Apollo 14 | rock | breccia | The purpose of the Comprehensive Sample (14169-14188; 14250-14299) was to acquire a statistically significant set of small rock samples to petrographically characterize the distribution of rock types in the lunar regolith. The sample location was selected 100 to 125 m west of the LM. A two to three meter diameter circle was marked and all of the walnut sized rocks on the surface within the circle were collected with tongs. Sample 14278 is a medium light gray, subrounded, coherent, low-grade, polymict breccia. |
14279 | Apollo 14 | rock | breccia | The purpose of the Comprehensive Sample (14169-14188; 14250-14299) was to acquire a statistically significant set of small rock samples to petrographically characterize the distribution of rock types in the lunar regolith. The sample location was selected 100 to 125 m west of the LM. A two to three meter diameter circle was marked and all of the walnut sized rocks on the surface within the circle were collected with tongs. Sample 14279 is medium light gray in color, blocky, rounded to subrounded in shape, and is a coherent, polymict breccia with a fragmented matrix. |
14280 | Apollo 14 | rock | breccia | The purpose of the Comprehensive Sample (14169-14188; 14250-14299) was to acquire a statistically significant set of small rock samples to petrographically characterize the distribution of rock types in the lunar regolith. The sample location was selected 100 to 125 m west of the LM. A two to three meter diameter circle was marked and all of the walnut sized rocks on the surface within the circle were collected with tongs. Sample 14280 is a medium dark gray, angular block of vitric (matrix) breccia. |
14281 | Apollo 14 | rock | breccia | The purpose of the Comprehensive Sample (14169-14188; 14250-14299) was to acquire a statistically significant set of small rock samples to petrographically characterize the distribution of rock types in the lunar regolith. The sample location was selected 100 to 125 m west of the LM. A two to three meter diameter circle was marked and all of the walnut sized rocks on the surface within the circle were collected with tongs. Sample 14281 is a medium dark gray, subrounded to angular block of coherent, vitric (matrix) breccia. |
14282 | Apollo 14 | rock | breccia | The purpose of the Comprehensive Sample (14169-14188; 14250-14299) was to acquire a statistically significant set of small rock samples to petrographically characterize the distribution of rock types in the lunar regolith. The sample location was selected 100 to 125 m west of the LM. A two to three meter diameter circle was marked and all of the walnut sized rocks on the surface within the circle were collected with tongs. Sample 14282 is a medium gray, friable, fragmental rock (soil breccia). |
14283 | Apollo 14 | rock | breccia | The purpose of the Comprehensive Sample (14169-14188; 14250-14299) was to acquire a statistically significant set of small rock samples to petrographically characterize the distribution of rock types in the lunar regolith. The sample location was selected 100 to 125 m west of the LM. A two to three meter diameter circle was marked and all of the walnut sized rocks on the surface within the circle were collected with tongs. Sample 14283 is a light gray, slabby, angular, coherent, crystalline, polymict breccia. |
14284 | Apollo 14 | rock | The purpose of the Comprehensive Sample (14169-14188; 14250-14299) was to acquire a statistically significant set of small rock samples to petrographically characterize the distribution of rock types in the lunar regolith. The sample location was selected 100 to 125 m west of the LM. A two to three meter diameter circle was marked and all of the walnut sized rocks on the surface within the circle were collected with tongs. Sample 14284 is a subrounded, medium gray, coherent, fragmental rock. | |
14285 | Apollo 14 | rock | breccia | The purpose of the Comprehensive Sample (14169-14188; 14250-14299) was to acquire a statistically significant set of small rock samples to petrographically characterize the distribution of rock types in the lunar regolith. The sample location was selected 100 to 125 m west of the LM. A two to three meter diameter circle was marked and all of the walnut sized rocks on the surface within the circle were collected with tongs. Sample 14285 is a light medium gray, coherent, polymict breccia. |
14286 | Apollo 14 | rock | The purpose of the Comprehensive Sample (14169-14188; 14250-14299) was to acquire a statistically significant set of small rock samples to petrographically characterize the distribution of rock types in the lunar regolith. The sample location was selected 100 to 125 m west of the LM. A two to three meter diameter circle was marked and all of the walnut sized rocks on the surface within the circle were collected with tongs. Sample 14286 is a medium brownish-gray fragmental rock. | |
14287 | Apollo 14 | rock | The purpose of the Comprehensive Sample (14169-14188; 14250-14299) was to acquire a statistically significant set of small rock samples to petrographically characterize the distribution of rock types in the lunar regolith. The sample location was selected 100 to 125 m west of the LM. A two to three meter diameter circle was marked and all of the walnut sized rocks on the surface within the circle were collected with tongs. Sample 14287 is a medium brownish gray, coherent, fragmental rock that is blocky and angular in shape. | |
14288 | Apollo 14 | rock | breccia | The purpose of the Comprehensive Sample (14169-14188; 14250-14299) was to acquire a statistically significant set of small rock samples to petrographically characterize the distribution of rock types in the lunar regolith. The sample location was selected 100 to 125 m west of the LM. A two to three meter diameter circle was marked and all of the walnut sized rocks on the surface within the circle were collected with tongs. Sample 14288 is a medium dark gray, vitric (matrix) breccia. It is blocky and angular in shpe and is coherent. |
14289 | Apollo 14 | The purpose of the Comprehensive Sample (14169-14188; 14250-14299) was to acquire a statistically significant set of small rock samples to petrographically characterize the distribution of rock types in the lunar regolith. The sample location was selected 100 to 125 m west of the LM. A two to three meter diameter circle was marked and all of the walnut sized rocks on the surface within the circle were collected with tongs. Sample 14288 is a medium dark gray, vitric (matrix) breccia. It is blocky and angular in shpe and is coherent. | ||
14170 | Apollo 14 | breccia | The purpose of the Comprehensive Sample (14169-14188; 14250-14299) was to acquire a statistically significant set of small rock samples to petrographically characterize the distribution of rock types in the lunar regolith. The sample location was selected 100 to 125 m west of the LM. A two to three meter diameter circle was marked and all of the walnut sized rocks on the surface within the circle were collected with tongs. These samples (14169 - 14188) contain a seriate distribution of clasts as large as two centimeters across. The samples are all polymict breccias with fragmental matrices. | |
14187 | Apollo 14 | The purpose of the Comprehensive Sample (14169-14188; 14250-14299) was to acquire a statistically significant set of small rock samples to petrographically characterize the distribution of rock types in the lunar regolith. The sample location was selected 100 to 125 m west of the LM. A two to three meter diameter circle was marked and all of the walnut sized rocks on the surface within the circle were collected with tongs. These samples ( 14169-14188) contain a seriate distribution of clasts as large as two centimeters across. The samples are all polymict breccias with fragmental matrices. | ||
14181 | Apollo 14 | basalt | The purpose of the Comprehensive Sample (14169-14188; 14250-14299) was to acquire a statistically significant set of small rock samples to petrographically characterize the distribution of rock types in the lunar regolith. The sample location was selected 100 to 125 m west of the LM. A two to three meter diameter circle was marked and all of the walnut sized rocks on the surface within the circle were collected with tongs. These samples (14169 - 14188) contain a seriate distribution of clasts as large as two centimeters across. The samples are all polymict breccias with fragmental matrices. | |
14184 | Apollo 14 | The purpose of the Comprehensive Sample (14169-14188; 14250-14299) was to acquire a statistically significant set of small rock samples to petrographically characterize the distribution of rock types in the lunar regolith. The sample location was selected 100 to 125 m west of the LM. A two to three meter diameter circle was marked and all of the walnut sized rocks on the surface within the circle were collected with tongs. These samples (14169 - 14188) contain a seriate distribution of clasts as large as two centimeters across. The samples are all polymict breccias with fragmental matrices. | ||
14183 | Apollo 14 | The purpose of the Comprehensive Sample (14169-14188; 14250-14299) was to acquire a statistically significant set of small rock samples to petrographically characterize the distribution of rock types in the lunar regolith. The sample location was selected 100 to 125 m west of the LM. A two to three meter diameter circle was marked and all of the walnut sized rocks on the surface within the circle were collected with tongs. These samples (14169 - 14188) contain a seriate distribution of clasts as large as two centimeters across. The samples are all polymict breccias with fragmental matrices. | ||
14182 | Apollo 14 | The purpose of the Comprehensive Sample (14169-14188; 14250-14299) was to acquire a statistically significant set of small rock samples to petrographically characterize the distribution of rock types in the lunar regolith. The sample location was selected 100 to 125 m west of the LM. A two to three meter diameter circle was marked and all of the walnut sized rocks on the surface within the circle were collected with tongs. These samples (14169 - 14188) contain a seriate distribution of clasts as large as two centimeters across. The samples are all polymict breccias with fragmental matrices. | ||
14180 | Apollo 14 | The purpose of the Comprehensive Sample (14169-14188; 14250-14299) was to acquire a statistically significant set of small rock samples to petrographically characterize the distribution of rock types in the lunar regolith. The sample location was selected 100 to 125 m west of the LM. A two to three meter diameter circle was marked and all of the walnut sized rocks on the surface within the circle were collected with tongs. These samples (14169 - 14188) contain a seriate distribution of clasts as large as two centimeters across. The samples are all polymict breccias with fragmental matrices. | ||
14179 | Apollo 14 | breccia | The purpose of the Comprehensive Sample (14169-14188; 14250-14299) was to acquire a statistically significant set of small rock samples to petrographically characterize the distribution of rock types in the lunar regolith. The sample location was selected 100 to 125 m west of the LM. A two to three meter diameter circle was marked and all of the walnut sized rocks on the surface within the circle were collected with tongs. These samples (14169 - 14188) contain a seriate distribution of clasts as large as two centimeters across. The samples are all polymict breccias with fragmental matrices. | |
14178 | Apollo 14 | The purpose of the Comprehensive Sample (14169-14188; 14250-14299) was to acquire a statistically significant set of small rock samples to petrographically characterize the distribution of rock types in the lunar regolith. The sample location was selected 100 to 125 m west of the LM. A two to three meter diameter circle was marked and all of the walnut sized rocks on the surface within the circle were collected with tongs. These samples (14169 - 14188) contain a seriate distribution of clasts as large as two centimeters across. The samples are all polymict breccias with fragmental matrices. | ||
14177 | Apollo 14 | The purpose of the Comprehensive Sample (14169-14188; 14250-14299) was to acquire a statistically significant set of small rock samples to petrographically characterize the distribution of rock types in the lunar regolith. The sample location was selected 100 to 125 m west of the LM. A two to three meter diameter circle was marked and all of the walnut sized rocks on the surface within the circle were collected with tongs. These samples (14169 - 14188) contain a seriate distribution of clasts as large as two centimeters across. The samples are all polymict breccias with fragmental matrices. | ||
14176 | Apollo 14 | The purpose of the Comprehensive Sample (14169-14188; 14250-14299) was to acquire a statistically significant set of small rock samples to petrographically characterize the distribution of rock types in the lunar regolith. The sample location was selected 100 to 125 m west of the LM. A two to three meter diameter circle was marked and all of the walnut sized rocks on the surface within the circle were collected with tongs. These samples (14169 - 14188) contain a seriate distribution of clasts as large as two centimeters across. The samples are all polymict breccias with fragmental matrices. | ||
14175 | Apollo 14 | breccia | The purpose of the Comprehensive Sample (14169-14188; 14250-14299) was to acquire a statistically significant set of small rock samples to petrographically characterize the distribution of rock types in the lunar regolith. The sample location was selected 100 to 125 m west of the LM. A two to three meter diameter circle was marked and all of the walnut sized rocks on the surface within the circle were collected with tongs. These samples (14169 - 14188) contain a seriate distribution of clasts as large as two centimeters across. The samples are all polymict breccias with fragmental matrices. | |
14174 | Apollo 14 | breccia | The purpose of the Comprehensive Sample (14169-14188; 14250-14299) was to acquire a statistically significant set of small rock samples to petrographically characterize the distribution of rock types in the lunar regolith. The sample location was selected 100 to 125 m west of the LM. A two to three meter diameter circle was marked and all of the walnut sized rocks on the surface within the circle were collected with tongs. These samples (14169 - 14188) contain a seriate distribution of clasts as large as two centimeters across. The samples are all polymict breccias with fragmental matrices. | |
14173 | Apollo 14 | breccia | The purpose of the Comprehensive Sample (14169-14188; 14250-14299) was to acquire a statistically significant set of small rock samples to petrographically characterize the distribution of rock types in the lunar regolith. The sample location was selected 100 to 125 m west of the LM. A two to three meter diameter circle was marked and all of the walnut sized rocks on the surface within the circle were collected with tongs. These samples (14169 - 14188) contain a seriate distribution of clasts as large as two centimeters across. The samples are all polymict breccias with fragmental matrices. | |
14172 | Apollo 14 | breccia | The purpose of the Comprehensive Sample (14169-14188; 14250-14299) was to acquire a statistically significant set of small rock samples to petrographically characterize the distribution of rock types in the lunar regolith. The sample location was selected 100 to 125 m west of the LM. A two to three meter diameter circle was marked and all of the walnut sized rocks on the surface within the circle were collected with tongs. These samples (14169 - 14188) contain a seriate distribution of clasts as large as two centimeters across. The samples are all polymict breccias with fragmental matrices. | |
14171 | Apollo 14 | breccia | The purpose of the Comprehensive Sample (14169-14188; 14250-14299) was to acquire a statistically significant set of small rock samples to petrographically characterize the distribution of rock types in the lunar regolith. The sample location was selected 100 to 125 m west of the LM. A two to three meter diameter circle was marked and all of the walnut sized rocks on the surface within the circle were collected with tongs. These samples (14169 - 14188) contain a seriate distribution of clasts as large as two centimeters across. The samples are all polymict breccias with fragmental matrices. | |
14169 | Apollo 14 | breccia | The purpose of the Comprehensive Sample (14169-14188; 14250-14299) was to acquire a statistically significant set of small rock samples to petrographically characterize the distribution of rock types in the lunar regolith. The sample location was selected 100 to 125 m west of the LM. A two to three meter diameter circle was marked and all of the walnut sized rocks on the surface within the circle were collected with tongs. These samples (14169 - 14188) contain a seriate distribution of clasts as large as two centimeters across. The samples are all polymict breccias with fragmental matrices. | |
14185 | Apollo 14 | The purpose of the Comprehensive Sample (14169-14188; 14250-14299) was to acquire a statistically significant set of small rock samples to petrographically characterize the distribution of rock types in the lunar regolith. The sample location was selected 100 to 125 m west of the LM. A two to three meter diameter circle was marked and all of the walnut sized rocks on the surface within the circle were collected with tongs. These samples (14169-14188) contain a seriate distribution of clasts as large as two centimeters across. The samples are all polymict breccias with fragmental matrices. | ||
14188 | Apollo 14 | The purpose of the Comprehensive Sample (14169-14188; 14250-14299) was to acquire a statistically significant set of small rock samples to petrographically characterize the distribution of rock types in the lunar regolith. The sample location was selected 100 to 125 m west of the LM. A two to three meter diameter circle was marked and all of the walnut sized rocks on the surface within the circle were collected with tongs. These samples (14169-14188) contain a seriate distribution of clasts as large as two centimeters across. The samples are all polymict breccias with fragmental matrices. | ||
14186 | Apollo 14 | The purpose of the Comprehensive Sample (14169-14188; 14250-14299) was to acquire a statistically significant set of small rock samples to petrographically characterize the distribution of rock types in the lunar regolith. The sample location was selected 100 to 125 m west of the LM. A two to three meter diameter circle was marked and all of the walnut sized rocks on the surface within the circle were collected with tongs. These samples (14169-14188) contain a seriate distribution of clasts as large as two centimeters across. The samples are all polymict breccias with fragmental matrices. | ||
14294 | Apollo 14 | breccia | The purpose of the Comprehensive Sample (14169-14188; 14250-14299) was to acquire a statistically significant set of small rock samples to petrographically characterize the distribution of rock types in the lunar regolith. The sample location was selected 100 to 125 m west of the LM. A two to three meter diameter circle was marked and all of the walnut sized rocks on the surface within the circle were collected with tongs. Weigh bag 1038 was used to hold rocks and fragments from Station H, EVA-2. The largest samples are numbered 14312-14320 and the residue is 14290-14297. Samples 14294-14297 are the largest fragments of the residue. Sample 14294 is a breccia with one rounded side and one angular side. It is grayish brown on the rounded surface and light to medium gray on the fresh surface. | |
14295 | Apollo 14 | rock | breccia | The purpose of the Comprehensive Sample (14169-14188; 14250-14299) was to acquire a statistically significant set of small rock samples to petrographically characterize the distribution of rock types in the lunar regolith. The sample location was selected 100 to 125 m west of the LM. A two to three meter diameter circle was marked and all of the walnut sized rocks on the surface within the circle were collected with tongs. Weigh bag 1038 was used to hold rocks and fragments from Station H, EVA-2. The largest samples are numbered 14312-14320 and the residue is 14290-14297. Samples 14294-14297 are the largest fragments of the residue. Sample 14295 is a fine grained, polymict breccia with 5% clasts larger than 1 mm and 95% matrix grains smaller than 1 mm in size. |
14296 | Apollo 14 | rock | breccia | The purpose of the Comprehensive Sample (14169-14188; 14250-14299) was to acquire a statistically significant set of small rock samples to petrographically characterize the distribution of rock types in the lunar regolith. The sample location was selected 100 to 125 m west of the LM. A two to three meter diameter circle was marked and all of the walnut sized rocks on the surface within the circle were collected with tongs. Weigh bag 1038 was used to hold rocks and fragments from Station H, EVA-2. The largest samples are numbered 14312-14320 and the residue is 14290-14297. Samples 14294-14297 are the largest fragments of the residue. Sample 14296 is a light ray, angular, flat, polymict breccia chip. |
14297 | Apollo 14 | rock | breccia | The purpose of the Comprehensive Sample (14169-14188; 14250-14299) was to acquire a statistically significant set of small rock samples to petrographically characterize the distribution of rock types in the lunar regolith. The sample location was selected 100 to 125 m west of the LM. A two to three meter diameter circle was marked and all of the walnut sized rocks on the surface within the circle were collected with tongs. Weigh bag 1038 was used to hold rocks and fragments from Station H, EVA-2. The largest samples are numbered 14312-14320 and the residue is 14290-14297. Samples 14294-14297 are the largest fragments of the residue. Sample 14297 is a polymict breccia with an unusual clast mineralogy. |
60500 | Apollo 16 | rake | soil | The sample accompanies rake sample 60510. The sieved portion of 60500 did not include any walnut sized rocks (> 1 cm), however, a large portion remains unsieved. |
62280 | Apollo 16 | soil | The sample area is on the south slope of Buster crater, fragments are mostly 5 cm or less, and craters are mostly 5-10 cm. There was a light colored material on the surface of the soil, but none of this high albedo material was found below the surface. | |
14443 | Apollo 14 | rock | The sample is a dust covered, slightly elongated, holocrystalline rock. | |
14450 | Apollo 14 | rock | The sample is an agglomerate of friable, clastic clods bonded by dark gray to honey brown vesicular glass. | |
15547 | Apollo 15 | basalt | The samples are similar, with a rather coarse-grained, granular texture. Olivine grains are found in the centers of pigeonite. Opaque minerals are found in groups. | |
15546 | Apollo 15 | rock | basalt | The samples are similar, with a rather coarse-grained, granular texture. Olivine grains are found in the centers of pigeonite. Opaque minerals are found in groups. |
14304 | Apollo 14 | rock | breccia | These samples (14303 and 14304) are pieces of a football-size rock collected from a location 80 m NNW of the LM during EVA 1. This rock was almost completely buried in the regolith and its orientation is unknown. Both of these samples have freshly broken surfaces. They were first identified as pieces of the same rock in March, 1977, when the models of the rock were found to fit together along their freshly broken surfaces. They share a common lithology which is especially evident along the broken surfaces. These samples were returned together in weigh bag 1027 which also contained samples 14305/302 and various smaller chips (see Phinney et al., 1975). These samples were examined in the CRA and NNPL by the PET, and 14303 was extensively distributed for scientific experimentation. Sample 14304 has been designated a posterity sample. |
14303 | Apollo 14 | rock | breccia | These samples (14303 and 14304) are pieces of a football-size rock collected from a location 80 m NNW of the LM during EVA 1. This rock was almost completely buried in the regolith and its orientation is unknown. Both of these samples have freshly broken surfaces. They were first identified as pieces of the same rock in March, 1977, when the models of the rock were found to fit together along their freshly broken surfaces. They share a common lithology which is especially evident along the broken surfaces. These samples were returned together in weigh bag 1027 which also contained samples 14305/302 and various smaller chips (see Phinney et al., 1975). These samples were examined in the CRA and NNPL by the PET< and 14303 was extensively distributed for scientific experimentation. Sample 14304 has been designated a posterity sample. This rock (14303) is a coherent, gray, block to subrounded breccia. |
15387 | Apollo 15 | basalt | These small samples are found to have high Mg content, probably due to olivine accumulation (another "picritic basalt" from Apollo 15 is found as a large clast in breccia sample 15459). The formation of 15385 has been dated at 3.4 b.y. with exposure to cosmic rays for about 280 m.y. | |
15385 | Apollo 15 | rake | basalt | These small samples are found to have high Mg content, probably due to olivine accumulation (another “picritic basalt” from Apollo 15 is found as a large clast in breccia sample 15459). The formation of 15385 has been dated at 3.4 b.y. with exposure to cosmic rays for about 280 m.y. |
15211 | Apollo 15 | soil | These soils were collected adjacent to the small boulder at station 2, Apollo 15. 15205 and 15206 were chipped off of the boulder and when 15205 was picked up, some soil (19201) was placed in same bag. 15211 was collected as a "fillet" sample of the boulder | |
15201 | Apollo 15 | soil | These soil were collected adjacent to the small boulder at station 2, Apollo 15. 15205 and 15206 were chipped off of the boulder and when 15205 was picked up, some soil (19201) was placed in same bag. !5211 was collected as a “fillet” sample of the boulder | |
15697 | Apollo 15 | rake | basalt | These three chips (15684, 15685, 15686) of mare basalt were split out of the station 9a rake sample in 1975 and have not been studied. There are no thin sections. |
15695 | Apollo 15 | rake | basalt | These three chips (15684, 15685, 15686) of mare basalt were split out of the station 9a rake sample in 1975 and have not been studied. There are no thin sections. |
15696 | Apollo 15 | rake | basalt | These three chips (15684, 15685, 15686) of mare basalt were split out of the station 9a rake sample in 1975 and have not been studied. There are no thin sections. |
15257 | Apollo 15 | breccia | These two samples were returned in a bag that also contained a large basalt (15256). They both contain a thin vesicular glass splash on one side. 15257 is clearly part of 15255 that broke off of during transport. This sample was collected at station 6 on the Apennine Front 15255 and 15257 are a coherent breccia with inegrained dark matrix. The texture and high content of rare gas confirms that it was a regolith sample.. | |
67600 | Apollo 16 | rake | soil | The soil is probably derived from North Ray crater ejecta |
67700 | Apollo 16 | rake | soil | The soil samples from station 11 at North Ray Crater have noticeably coarser grain size and are less mature compared with other lunar soils probably due to the fact that NRC is only 50 m.y. old (Arvidson et al. 1975). |
60519 | Apollo 16 | rake | the surface is mostly coated with micrometeorite craters and is cataclastic anorthosite - of the ferroan variety. | |
60518 | Apollo 16 | rake | the surface is mostly coated with micrometeorite craters and is cataclastic anorthosite - of the ferroan variety. | |
60517 | Apollo 16 | rake | the surface is mostly coated with micrometeorite craters and is cataclastic anorthosite - of the ferroan variety. | |
60516 | Apollo 16 | rake | the surface is mostly coated with micrometeorite craters and is cataclastic anorthosite - of the ferroan variety. | |
60515 | Apollo 16 | rake | the surface is mostly coated with micrometeorite craters and is cataclastic anorthosite - of the ferroan variety. | |
64435 | Apollo 16 | breccia | thick shiny black glass coat on one side and numerous micrometeorite pits on the other | |
67936 | Apollo 16 | rock | basalt | thin veins of black glass, texture of fine-grained subophitic basalt |
67935 | Apollo 16 | rock | basalt | thin veins of black glass, texture of fine-grained subophitic basalt |
67937 | Apollo 16 | rock | basalt | thin veins of black glass, texture of fine-grained subophitic basalt |
14320 | Apollo 14 | breccia | This breccia was collected from North Boulder Field from Station h during EVA 2. The sample has not been identified in lunar surface photographs so the lunar location is only tentative and the lunar orientation is unknown. Sample 14320 was returned in weight bag 1038. This is a medium gray, coherent, polymict breccia. | |
15600 | Apollo 15 | soil | This comprehensive soil was collected at Station 9A to accompany the rake samples 20 m northeast of the rim of Hadley Rille. The surface around the sample is smoth, level, and locally free of rock fragments greater tha 5 cm across. The general vicinity is littered with fragments commonly up to 20 cm across and a few sparse scattered boulders greater than a meter across. | |
14453 | Apollo 14 | rock | breccia | This is a banded, light gray, slightly flattened, breccia chip. |
70160 | Apollo 17 | soil | This is a fillet soil near the ALSEP central station, 180 meters west of the LM, at the base of a 1.5 meter boulder. Sample area has about 2-5% rock cover. Fines are darker when disturbed and compaction is greater in the fillet. | |
75060 | Apollo 17 | soil | This is a mantling soil that was collected from a 1 cm depression on a 3 meter boulder, at Station 5, the southwest rim of Camelot crater. The site has an undulating slope with cobbles and boulders covering 30% of the surface. The soil contains two rock chips, 75065-66. | |
14441 | Apollo 14 | rock | This is a medium to dark gray, coherent, fragmental rock with a pronounced conical shape. | |
73220 | Apollo 17 | soil | This is a skim sample from the top 1 cm of trench (73240 is from the bottom). The trench is on the rim of a 10 meter crater in light mantle deposits at Station 3. The site slopes 7 degrees to the east, 1-10 cm fragments are common and >10 cm fragments are sparse. | |
78500 | Apollo 17 | soil | This is a surface sample to accompany rake sample 78525-599, collected near the rim of a subdued 15 meter crater at the base of Sculptured Hills, south of Wessex Cleft. The site has a moderate slope to the southwest with scattered pebbles, clods, and small rocks. | |
75080 | Apollo 17 | soil | This is a surface soil sample from a site on the regolith surface a few meters from sample 75060 at Station 5 on the southwest rim of Camelot crater. The sample area is undulating with cobbles and boulders covering 30% of the surface. | |
73140 | Apollo 17 | soil | This is a trench sample collected to a depth of 15 cm near surface sample 73120 at Station 2A, about 750 meters north-northeast of Station 2 at the base of South Massif on the light mantle deposits. The site is generally level, with fragments >5cm sparse and craters >10 cm sparse. | |
73280 | Apollo 17 | soil | This is a trench sample from about 5-10 cm below the surface. It appears to be similar to the light gray material just below the surface. It was collected at Station 3 with skim sample 73220 on the rim of a 10 meter crater in the light mantle. The site slopes 7 degrees to the east, 1-10 cm fragments are common and >10 cm fragments are sparse. | |
73260 | Apollo 17 | soil | This is a trench sample from part of the "marbled zone" 5-10 cm below the surface. It may also include some material from the small patch of light material visible in the pre-sampling photographs. It was collected at Station 3 with skim sample 73220 on the rim of a 10 meter crater in the light mantle. The site slopes 7 degrees to the east, 1-10 cm fragments are common and >10 cm fragments are sparse. | |
73240 | Apollo 17 | soil | This is a trench sample from the upper part of a 15 cm deep trench containing a medium gray surface layer and a 3 cm light gray layer just below the surface. It was collected at Station 3 with skim sample 73220 on the rim of a 10 meter crater in the light mantle. The site slopes 7 degrees to the east, 1-10 cm fragments are common and >10 cm fragments are sparse. | |
14444 | Apollo 14 | rock | This is a very light gray, coherent, holocrystalline rock with 4% megacrysts. | |
74260 | Apollo 17 | soil | This is gray soil that was bordering the meter wide band of reddish soil (74240 is southwest of the colored soil and 74260 is to the northeast) at Station 4 on the rim of Shorty crater. The site is near the low place in the crater rim crest. The fragment population is highly variable, and craters up to several meters in diameter are common. | |
74240 | Apollo 17 | soil | This is gray soil that was bordering the meter wide band of reddish soil (74240 is southwest of the colored soil and 74260 is to the northeast) at Station 4 on the rim of Shorty crater. The site is near the low place in the crater rim crest. The fragment population is highly variable, and craters up to several meters in diameter are common. | |
61510 | Apollo 16 | rake | This is part of a radial sample sequence with 61180, 61160, and 61140. The site is level with fragments 1-10 cm sparse and none larger in the area. Craters <3 m are common; most are subdued but one has a sharp rim. | |
61500 | Apollo 16 | rake | soil | This is part of a radial sample sequence with 61180, 61160, and 61140. The site is level with fragments 1-10 cm sparse and none larger in the area. Craters <3 m are common; most are subdued but one has a sharp rim. |
78480 | Apollo 17 | soil | This is part of trench sequence at Station 8 at the base of Sculptured Hills south of Wessex Cleft. 78420 is at the bottom of a 25 cm trench, 78440 is at a depth of 6-15 cm, 78460 is at a depth of 1-6 cm, and 78480 is from the upper 1 cm. The site has a moderate slope to the southwest, a few pebbles and clods <5 cm are found, and the area is saturated with 1 cm craters. There are a few larger craters in the area. | |
78420 | Apollo 17 | soil | This is part of trench sequence at Station 8 at the base of Sculptured Hills south of Wessex Cleft. 78420 is at the bottom of a 25 cm trench, 78440 is at a depth of 6-15 cm, 78460 is at a depth of 1-6 cm, and 78480 is from the upper 1 cm. The site has a moderate slope to the southwest, a few pebbles and clods <5 cm are found, and the area is saturated with 1 cm craters. There are a few larger craters in the area. | |
78460 | Apollo 17 | soil | This is part of trench sequence at Station 8 at the base of Sculptured Hills south of Wessex Cleft. 78420 is at the bottom of a 25 cm trench, 78440 is at a depth of 6-15 cm, 78460 is at a depth of 1-6 cm, and 78480 is from the upper 1 cm. The site has a moderate slope to the southwest, a few pebbles and clods <5 cm are found, and the area is saturated with 1 m craters. There are a few larger craters in the area. | |
15435 | Apollo 15 | breccia | This is probably the material from the "pedestal" that 15415 was perched on. After 15415 was picked off the top, the pedestal was broken up and several pieces collected from the soil. It was returned in the same bag as 15430 through 15437. This sample has not been studied. | |
15020 | Apollo 15 | soil | This is the contingency sample collected 12 m west of the LM +Z footpad. The surface material here is soft and fine grained. The sample was taken on a small flat between two subdued 1 m craters. The sample sieved includes a 1.1g glass coated microbreccia, but excludes a 77 gm coherent breccia. | |
15545 | Apollo 15 | rock | basalt | This potato-shaped rock has the remains of very large glass lining from micrometeorite impacts as well as prominent patina from glass splashes. |
15445 | Apollo 15 | breccia | This sample and its close companion (15455) are thought to be ejecta from the Imbrium Basin. Their exposure ages (~200 m.y.) may help date the age of Spur Crater where they were found. | |
14446 | Apollo 14 | rock | This sample consists of four small chips of plagioclase-rich rock. | |
14439 | Apollo 14 | rock | This sample consists of two, small, subequal pieces of a fragmental rock. | |
14440 | Apollo 14 | rock | This sample is a blocky, angular, medium gray, holocrystalline rock with smooth, unpitted surfaces. | |
14427 | Apollo 14 | rock | This sample is a fine grained clastic rock composed of white feldspar and black glass. | |
14448 | Apollo 14 | rock | This sample is an agglomerate of fine grained, clastic rocks held together by spatter glass. | |
14426 | Apollo 14 | rock | breccia | This sample is a polymict breccia which is broken into two pieces which are similar. The sample is a friable, fine grained, polymict breccia with textural and mineralogic homogeniety. |
14451 | Apollo 14 | rock | This sample is a very light gray, coherent, massive, inequigranular, holocrystalline rock. | |
72150 | Apollo 17 | soil | This sample is document bag residue left in the bag which contained 72155, a 420 gm basalt. The basalt and the residue were collected during an LRV traverse on Tortilla flat between SEP and Station 2. The sample area is flat with sparse fragments. The sampling and handling procedures make this data very suspect. | |
75110 | Apollo 17 | soil | This sample was collected during LRV traverse #7, from the apex of Victory crater on the inner slope of the crater rim. The site has pebbles to 1 meter size boulders covering 2-3% of the surface. The fragments appear to be randomly scattered, but there is a slight concentration on the rims of small craters. | |
14259 | Apollo 14 | soil | This scoop sample is part of the comprehensive sample collected 110 m WNW of LM along with 14165 through 14189, 14250 through 14289, 14298 through 14300, and 14420. All samples were collected from within a 4 m circle drawn by Astronaut Shepard. Astronaut Mitchell reports, "The number of surface rocks, or rocks compared with the number of surface fines is very small Houston. There's a few boulders lying around and there's a few blocks around some of the craters, but by and large, it's a powdery surface." | |
14447 | Apollo 14 | rock | This small sample is blocky and angular in shape, it has a very hackly surface. It appears to be an agglometation of fine grained clastics that is held together with glass. | |
72440 | Apollo 17 | soil | This soil was collected at Station 2, near the base of South Massif. The upper 4 cm of soil was collected from a .7 meter breccia boulder which was rolled over by the crew. 72440 was from the upper 4 cm of the soil, and 72460 was a skim sample. The area was too disturbed after rolling the boulder over to compare well with the undisturbed fines, but generally it appears similar. The sample area is a strewn boulder field with loose fines. | |
72240 | Apollo 17 | soil | This soil was collected at Station 2, near the base of South Massif. The upper 4 cm of soil was collected from under a .7 meter breccia boulder which was rolled over by the crew. 72440 was from the upper 4 cm of the soil, and 72460 was a skim sample. The area was too disturbed after rolling the boulder over to compare well with the undisturbed fines, but generally it appears similar. The sample area is a strewn boulder field with loose fines. | |
75210 | Apollo 17 | soil | This soil was collected during LRV traverse #8, between Victory and Horatio craters in an area of dark mantle between the small craters. The area is flat with scattered craters less than 5 meters in diameter. Clods <10 cm are found on the rims of fresh craters. "Raindrops" are present on the surface of the sample area. | |
72140 | Apollo 17 | soil | This soil was collected during the LRV traverse between Station 1 and 2 on the "prong" or very faint extension of the white mantle of a crater rim. The sample area is undulating, and fragments greater than 10 cm are rare. The ground surface is patterned in a "raindrop" texture. This sample is very cohesive. | |
61160 | Apollo 16 | soil | This surface sample was collected 10 meters Northeast of the rim of Plum crater as part of a radial sample sequence (with 61180, 61500, and 61140). It was collected from a spot disturbed by a footprint. The site is level with fragments <2 cm common and >2 cm sparse. A .75 m boulder is 2 meters north of the sample. | |
79510 | Apollo 17 | soil | This surface sample was collected 2 meters east of the large boulder where 79120 was collected. Both samples were taken from the southeast rim of Van Serg crater, Station 9. There is no slope at the rim crest, fragments 2-30 cm cover 10% of the surface, the largest boulder in the area is 1.5 meters. Craters are negligible on the Van Serg crater rim. | |
70180 | Apollo 17 | soil | This surface soil was collected 3 meters from the deep core site on the rim of an 8 meter blocky crater at the ALSEP. The sample area is flat and level with 2-3% block cover. Craters 10 cm to 1 meter in size are common, the fines are rather loose at the sample site on the rim of a .5 meter crater. This soil was collected with 70185, an 8 cm vuggy basalt. | |
76280 | Apollo 17 | soil | This surface soil was collected at Station 6 on the south slope of the North Massif. It has a large boulder nearby which casts a permanent shadow on 76240: 76260 and 76280 are just outside the limit of the overhang. 76260 is a 2 cm skim and 76280 is a 5 cm scoop. The area slopes 11 degrees to the south with scattered fragments <6cm. | |
76260 | Apollo 17 | soil | This surface soil was collected at Station 6 on the south slope of the North Massif. It has a large boulder nearby which casts a permanent shadow on 76240: 76260 and 76280 are just outside the limit of the overhang. 76260 is a 2 cm skim and 76280 is a 5 cm scoop. The area slopes 11 degrees to the south with scattered fragments <6cm. | |
74120 | Apollo 17 | soil | This surface soil was collected from the LRV while traversing over light mantle deposits between Stations 3 and 4. The site is undulating, yet regionally level with fragments >10 cm sparse. Craters <1 meter are abundant, but craters >1 meter are sparse. | |
15455 | Apollo 15 | breccia | Together, these two breccia samples (15455 and 15445) and the nearby boulder, are thought to represent ejecta from the Imbrium Basin | |
15499 | Apollo 15 | basalt | top surface of 15499 is rounded with micrometeorite craters, whille the bottom suface is freshly broken. The radiometeric age of this boulder is ~3.4 b.y., with an exposure age of 114 m.y. | |
60618 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | tough, light gray rake sample consisting of basaltic impact melt and cataclastic anorthosite; found to be highly aluminous with an age about 4 b.y. |
61156 | Apollo 16 | rock | impact melt breccia | Tough, medium gray, poikilitic impact melt that has been thermally metamorphosed |
12023 | Apollo 12 | soil | Trench sample 12023 (collected at a depth of 20 cm) was collected from the east rim of the 20 meter Sharp crater. The rim material is softer and lighter in ccolor than the surrounding material. | |
12033 | Apollo 12 | soil-general | Trench sample 12033 was collected 15 cm below the surface, 15 meters from the northwest rim of Head Crater near 12031. The trench bottom is lighter in color than the surface materials. Astronauts noticed more large blocks on the west side of Bench crater than on the east. | |
14156 | Apollo 14 | soil | Trench sample collected at Station G 30 m NE of North Triplet crater. 14145, 14146, 14147, and 14148 collected from the top of the rench, 14153, 14154, 14155, 14156 is mixed material from the middle two layers including a thin layer of glassy pebbles, 14080 and 14081 below that, and 14073, 14074, 14075, 14076, 14077, 14078, 14079, 14149, 14150, 14151, and 14152 from the bottom of the 40 cm trench. Astronaut Shepard reports the surface fines were so loose the trench walls kept falling in the layered materials mixed. | |
76535 | Apollo 17 | rake | troctolite | Troctolite, random sample as part of rake sample at Station 6 |
60600 | Apollo 16 | rake | soil | typical Apollo 16 soil; coarse-fine particles |
60535 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | typical glass matrix regolith breccias |
60637 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | typical glass matrix regolith breccias, glass shards, lithic fragments and mineral fragments in a seriate grain size distribution |
77517 | Apollo 17 | rake | breccia | Unique Fragmental Breccia; sample 77517 is exotic to Apollo 17 site, contining mineral fragments of pink aluminous spinel, aluminous enstatite, and forsterite. |
77538 | Apollo 17 | rake | breccia | Unusual Fragmental Breccia |
68001 | Apollo 16 | core | very coarse grained; speculated that "the top of this zone may represent a buried topographic surface". However, this study was based on an interpretation of the Xradiograph, and was not confirmed by the study of the core after extrusion. Schwarz (1994) described the samples during dissection. | |
62275 | Apollo 16 | anorthite | very friable, chalky white rock that broke up into powder during handling in curatorial labs and has not been adequately studied. | |
67035 | Apollo 16 | rock | fragmental breccia | Very friable, light matrix breccia; was found to be 3.95 b.y. |
67455 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | very friable, white polymict feldspathic breccia |
65901 | Apollo 16 | very mature soil and has an average grain size of 85 microns | ||
66031 | Apollo 16 | rake | soil | very mature soil with an average grain size of 121 microns |
61546 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | vesicular chunk of glass with numerous small white clast and micrometeorite craters on one side only. |
60645 | Apollo 16 | rake | impact melt breccia | vesicular fine-grained impact melt with an unusual coloration |
67729 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | vesicular glass breccia with significant clasts, and has the appearance of a "glass bomb". It has zap pits on all sides. |
76215 | Apollo 17 | rock | impact melt breccia | Vesicular Micropoikilitic Impact Melt Breccia |
76015 | Apollo 17 | rock | impact melt breccia | Vesicular Micropoikilitic Impact Melt Breccia; chipped off top corner of Block 5 of big boulder at Station 6; summarized by Spudis/Ryder (1981) that boulder is from the melt sheet or ejecta blanket from the Serenitatus impact event |
15672 | Apollo 15 | rake | basalt | vesicular, olivine-normative basalts with about medium grain size. The average grain size is about 1 mm. |
15659 | Apollo 15 | rake | basalt | vesicular, olivine-normative basalts with about medium grain size. The average grain size is about 1 mm. 15659 has been dated at 3.34 ± 0.04 b.y. |
76135 | Apollo 17 | rake | impact melt breccia | Vesicular Poikilitic Impact Melt Breccia |
77135 | Apollo 17 | rock | impact melt breccia | Vesicular Poikilitic Impact Melt Rock |
60057 | Apollo 16 | rake | soil | walnut-sized particles from soil sample 60050 are what gave the soil a "white" appearance on the lunar surface. |
60058 | Apollo 16 | rake | soil | walnut-sized particles from soil sample 60050 are what gave the soil a "white" appearance on the lunar surface. |
60055 | Apollo 16 | rake | soil | walnut-sized particles from soil sample 60050 are what gave the soil a "white" appearance on the lunar surface. |
60056 | Apollo 16 | rake | soil | walnut-sized particles from soil sample 60050 are what gave the soil a "white" appearance on the lunar surface. |
60059 | Apollo 16 | rake | soil | walnut-sized particles from soil sample 60050 are what gave the soil a "white" appearance on the lunar surface. |
64477 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | Warner et al. (1973) termed 64477 "cataclastic anorthosite to light matrix breccia plus mesostasis-rich basalt". |
60525 | Apollo 16 | rake | impact melt breccia | Warner et al. (1976) described 60525 as heterogeneous, with half of matrix with poikilitic texture and half with subophitic texture. |
67636 | Apollo 16 | rake | Warren and Wasson (1980) describe 67635, 67636 and 67637 as mildly-shocked "monomict breccia, perhaps slightly less cataclastic than is typical for ferroan anorthosite". | |
14195 | Apollo 14 | rock | Weigh bag 1031 was used on the traverse during the second EVA. Samples 14194-14201 are small rock fragments that were left in weight bag 1031 after samples 14306-14311 were removed. Their lunar location and orientation are unknown and there are no lunar surface photographs of these samples. Some of these are probably pieces broken off the larger rocks during transit. This sample is a coherent, medium to dark gray, fragmental rock. | |
14198 | Apollo 14 | Weigh bag 1031 was used on the traverse during the second EVA. Samples 14194-14201 are small rock fragments that were left in weight bag 1031 after samples 14306-14311 were removed. Their lunar location and orientation are unknown and there are no lunar surface photographs of these samples. Some of these are probably pieces broken off the larger rocks during transit. This sample is a crystalline rock. | ||
14201 | Apollo 14 | rock | breccia | Weigh bag 1031 was used on the traverse during the second EVA. Samples 14194-14201 are small rock fragments that were left in weight bag 1031 after samples 14306-14311 were removed. Their lunar location and orientation are unknown and there are no lunar surface photographs of these samples. Some of these are probably pieces broken off the larger rocks during transit. This sample is a fine grained polymict breccia similar to 14042. |
14200 | Apollo 14 | rock | basalt | Weigh bag 1031 was used on the traverse during the second EVA. Samples 14194-14201 are small rock fragments that were left in weight bag 1031 after samples 14306-14311 were removed. Their lunar location and orientation are unknown and there are no lunar surface photographs of these samples. Some of these are probably pieces broken off the larger rocks during transit. This sample is a fragment of very fine grained basaltic crystalline rock. |
14199 | Apollo 14 | rock | basalt | Weigh bag 1031 was used on the traverse during the second EVA. Samples 14194-14201 are small rock fragments that were left in weight bag 1031 after samples 14306-14311 were removed. Their lunar location and orientation are unknown and there are no lunar surface photographs of these samples. Some of these are probably pieces broken off the larger rocks during transit. This sample is a freshly fractured, polymict breccia. |
14196 | Apollo 14 | rock | Weigh bag 1031 was used on the traverse during the second EVA. Samples 14194-14201 are small rock fragments that were left in weight bag 1031 after samples 14306-14311 were removed. Their lunar location and orientation are unknown and there are no lunar surface photographs of these samples. Some of these are probably pieces broken off the larger rocks during transit. This sample is a friable, polymict breccia similar to 14051 or 14066. | |
14194 | Apollo 14 | rock | breccia | Weigh bag 1031 was used on the traverse during the second EVA. Samples 14194-14201 are small rock fragments that were left in weight bag 1031 after samples 14306-14311 were removed. Their lunar location and orientation are unknown and there are no lunar surface photographs of these samples. Some of these are probably pieces broken off the larger rocks during transit. This sample is a light gray, moderately friable, polymict breccia which appears to be bounded by freshly broken surface. |
14197 | Apollo 14 | Weigh bag 1031 was used on the traverse during the second EVA. Samples 14194-14201 are small rock fragments that were left in weight bag 1031 after samples 14306-14311 were removed. Their lunar location and orientation are unknown and there are no lunar surface photographs of these samples. Some of these are probably pieces broken off the larger rocks during transit. This sample is very fine grained and appears to be completely recrystallized. | ||
67215 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | white polymict breccia made up of mostly calcic plagioclase and a few relict lithic clasts and has lots of zap pits on top and bottom |
65327 | Apollo 16 | rake | white rocks with a thin coat of black glass; zap pits on the white surfaces where the black glass has apparently been eroded off | |
65325 | Apollo 16 | rake | anorthite | white rocks with a thin coat of black glass; zap pits on the white surfaces where the black glass has apparently been eroded off |
71062 | Apollo 17 | |||
71063 | Apollo 17 | |||
71064 | Apollo 17 | |||
71089 | Apollo 17 | |||
71090 | Apollo 17 | |||
71091 | Apollo 17 | |||
71092 | Apollo 17 | |||
71093 | Apollo 17 | |||
71094 | Apollo 17 | |||
71130 | Apollo 17 | |||
71131 | Apollo 17 | soil <1 mm | ||
71150 | Apollo 17 | |||
71170 | Apollo 17 | |||
71501 | Apollo 17 | |||
71502 | Apollo 17 | |||
71503 | Apollo 17 | |||
71504 | Apollo 17 | |||
71520 | Apollo 17 | |||
71521 | Apollo 17 | |||
71522 | Apollo 17 | |||
71523 | Apollo 17 | |||
71524 | Apollo 17 | |||
71529 | Apollo 17 | |||
71530 | Apollo 17 | |||
71531 | Apollo 17 | |||
71532 | Apollo 17 | |||
71533 | Apollo 17 | |||
71534 | Apollo 17 | |||
71535 | Apollo 17 | |||
71536 | Apollo 17 | basalt | ||
71537 | Apollo 17 | basalt | ||
71538 | Apollo 17 | |||
71539 | Apollo 17 | basalt | ||
71540 | Apollo 17 | |||
71541 | Apollo 17 | |||
71542 | Apollo 17 | |||
71543 | Apollo 17 | |||
71544 | Apollo 17 | |||
71545 | Apollo 17 | |||
71546 | Apollo 17 | basalt | ||
71547 | Apollo 17 | |||
71548 | Apollo 17 | basalt | ||
71549 | Apollo 17 | basalt | ||
71550 | Apollo 17 | |||
71551 | Apollo 17 | |||
71552 | Apollo 17 | |||
71553 | Apollo 17 | |||
71554 | Apollo 17 | |||
71555 | Apollo 17 | basalt | ||
71556 | Apollo 17 | basalt | ||
71557 | Apollo 17 | rock | high-Ti mare basalt | |
71558 | Apollo 17 | |||
71559 | Apollo 17 | basalt | ||
71560 | Apollo 17 | |||
71561 | Apollo 17 | |||
71562 | Apollo 17 | |||
71563 | Apollo 17 | |||
71564 | Apollo 17 | |||
71565 | Apollo 17 | basalt | ||
71566 | Apollo 17 | basalt | ||
71567 | Apollo 17 | basalt | ||
71568 | Apollo 17 | basalt | ||
71569 | Apollo 17 | basalt | ||
71570 | Apollo 17 | |||
71571 | Apollo 17 | |||
71572 | Apollo 17 | |||
71573 | Apollo 17 | |||
71574 | Apollo 17 | |||
71575 | Apollo 17 | |||
71576 | Apollo 17 | basalt | ||
71577 | Apollo 17 | basalt | ||
71578 | Apollo 17 | basalt | ||
71579 | Apollo 17 | |||
71580 | Apollo 17 | |||
71581 | Apollo 17 | |||
71582 | Apollo 17 | |||
71583 | Apollo 17 | |||
71584 | Apollo 17 | |||
71585 | Apollo 17 | |||
71586 | Apollo 17 | basalt | ||
71587 | Apollo 17 | basalt | ||
71588 | Apollo 17 | basalt | ||
71589 | Apollo 17 | |||
71590 | Apollo 17 | |||
71591 | Apollo 17 | |||
71592 | Apollo 17 | |||
71593 | Apollo 17 | |||
71594 | Apollo 17 | |||
71595 | Apollo 17 | basalt | ||
71597 | Apollo 17 | |||
72130 | Apollo 17 | |||
72131 | Apollo 17 | |||
72132 | Apollo 17 | |||
72133 | Apollo 17 | |||
72134 | Apollo 17 | |||
72141 | Apollo 17 | soil <1 mm | ||
72160 | Apollo 17 | |||
72161 | Apollo 17 | |||
72162 | Apollo 17 | |||
72163 | Apollo 17 | |||
72164 | Apollo 17 | |||
72210 | Apollo 17 | |||
72220 | Apollo 17 | |||
72221 | Apollo 17 | |||
72222 | Apollo 17 | |||
72223 | Apollo 17 | |||
72224 | Apollo 17 | |||
72230 | Apollo 17 | |||
72241 | Apollo 17 | |||
72242 | Apollo 17 | |||
72243 | Apollo 17 | |||
72244 | Apollo 17 | |||
72250 | Apollo 17 | |||
72260 | Apollo 17 | |||
72261 | Apollo 17 | |||
72262 | Apollo 17 | |||
72263 | Apollo 17 | |||
72264 | Apollo 17 | |||
72270 | Apollo 17 | |||
72310 | Apollo 17 | |||
72321 | Apollo 17 | |||
72322 | Apollo 17 | |||
72323 | Apollo 17 | |||
72324 | Apollo 17 | |||
72330 | Apollo 17 | |||
72350 | Apollo 17 | |||
72370 | Apollo 17 | |||
72390 | Apollo 17 | |||
72410 | Apollo 17 | |||
72430 | Apollo 17 | |||
72431 | Apollo 17 | |||
72432 | Apollo 17 | |||
72433 | Apollo 17 | |||
72434 | Apollo 17 | |||
72441 | Apollo 17 | |||
72442 | Apollo 17 | |||
72443 | Apollo 17 | |||
72444 | Apollo 17 | |||
72461 | Apollo 17 | |||
72462 | Apollo 17 | |||
72463 | Apollo 17 | |||
72464 | Apollo 17 | |||
72501 | Apollo 17 | |||
72502 | Apollo 17 | |||
72503 | Apollo 17 | |||
72504 | Apollo 17 | |||
72530 | Apollo 17 | |||
72531 | Apollo 17 | |||
72532 | Apollo 17 | |||
72533 | Apollo 17 | |||
72534 | Apollo 17 | |||
72540 | Apollo 17 | |||
72541 | Apollo 17 | |||
72542 | Apollo 17 | |||
72543 | Apollo 17 | |||
72544 | Apollo 17 | |||
72550 | Apollo 17 | |||
72551 | Apollo 17 | |||
72552 | Apollo 17 | |||
72553 | Apollo 17 | |||
72554 | Apollo 17 | |||
72701 | Apollo 17 | |||
72702 | Apollo 17 | |||
72703 | Apollo 17 | |||
72704 | Apollo 17 | |||
72730 | Apollo 17 | |||
73001 | Apollo 17 | |||
73002 | Apollo 17 | |||
73124 | Apollo 17 | |||
73130 | Apollo 17 | |||
73131 | Apollo 17 | |||
73132 | Apollo 17 | |||
73134 | Apollo 17 | |||
73141 | Apollo 17 | |||
73142 | Apollo 17 | |||
73143 | Apollo 17 | |||
73144 | Apollo 17 | |||
73150 | Apollo 17 | |||
73151 | Apollo 17 | |||
73153 | Apollo 17 | |||
73154 | Apollo 17 | |||
73210 | Apollo 17 | |||
73211 | Apollo 17 | |||
73212 | Apollo 17 | |||
73213 | Apollo 17 | |||
73214 | Apollo 17 | |||
73221 | Apollo 17 | |||
73222 | Apollo 17 | |||
73223 | Apollo 17 | |||
73224 | Apollo 17 | |||
73230 | Apollo 17 | |||
73241 | Apollo 17 | |||
73242 | Apollo 17 | |||
73243 | Apollo 17 | |||
73244 | Apollo 17 | |||
73250 | Apollo 17 | |||
73261 | Apollo 17 | |||
73262 | Apollo 17 | |||
73263 | Apollo 17 | |||
73264 | Apollo 17 | |||
73270 | Apollo 17 | |||
73281 | Apollo 17 | |||
73282 | Apollo 17 | |||
73283 | Apollo 17 | |||
73284 | Apollo 17 | |||
74110 | Apollo 17 | |||
74111 | Apollo 17 | |||
74112 | Apollo 17 | |||
74113 | Apollo 17 | |||
74114 | Apollo 17 | |||
74124 | Apollo 17 | |||
74221 | Apollo 17 | |||
74222 | Apollo 17 | |||
74223 | Apollo 17 | |||
74224 | Apollo 17 | |||
74250 | Apollo 17 | |||
75010 | Apollo 17 | |||
75030 | Apollo 17 | |||
75050 | Apollo 17 | |||
75061 | Apollo 17 | |||
75062 | Apollo 17 | |||
75063 | Apollo 17 | |||
75064 | Apollo 17 | |||
75070 | Apollo 17 | |||
75081 | Apollo 17 | |||
75082 | Apollo 17 | |||
75083 | Apollo 17 | |||
75084 | Apollo 17 | |||
75111 | Apollo 17 | |||
75112 | Apollo 17 | |||
75113 | Apollo 17 | |||
75114 | Apollo 17 | |||
75120 | Apollo 17 | |||
75121 | Apollo 17 | |||
75122 | Apollo 17 | |||
75123 | Apollo 17 | |||
75196 | Apollo 17 | |||
75224 | Apollo 17 | |||
75701 | Apollo 17 | rake | ||
76001 | Apollo 17 | |||
76120 | Apollo 17 | |||
76121 | Apollo 17 | |||
76122 | Apollo 17 | |||
76123 | Apollo 17 | |||
76124 | Apollo 17 | |||
76130 | Apollo 17 | |||
76131 | Apollo 17 | |||
76132 | Apollo 17 | |||
76133 | Apollo 17 | |||
76134 | Apollo 17 | |||
76210 | Apollo 17 | |||
76230 | Apollo 17 | |||
76240 | Apollo 17 | |||
76241 | Apollo 17 | |||
76242 | Apollo 17 | |||
76243 | Apollo 17 | |||
76244 | Apollo 17 | |||
76250 | Apollo 17 | |||
76261 | Apollo 17 | |||
76262 | Apollo 17 | |||
76263 | Apollo 17 | |||
76264 | Apollo 17 | |||
76270 | Apollo 17 | |||
76281 | Apollo 17 | |||
76282 | Apollo 17 | |||
76283 | Apollo 17 | |||
76284 | Apollo 17 | |||
76290 | Apollo 17 | |||
76310 | Apollo 17 | |||
76501 | Apollo 17 | |||
76502 | Apollo 17 | |||
76503 | Apollo 17 | |||
76504 | Apollo 17 | |||
76530 | Apollo 17 | |||
76540 | Apollo 17 | |||
76541 | Apollo 17 | |||
76542 | Apollo 17 | |||
76543 | Apollo 17 | |||
76544 | Apollo 17 | |||
76546 | Apollo 17 | |||
76547 | Apollo 17 | |||
76549 | Apollo 17 | |||
76550 | Apollo 17 | |||
76551 | Apollo 17 | |||
76552 | Apollo 17 | |||
76553 | Apollo 17 | |||
76554 | Apollo 17 | |||
76560 | Apollo 17 | |||
76561 | Apollo 17 | |||
76562 | Apollo 17 | |||
76563 | Apollo 17 | |||
76564 | Apollo 17 | |||
76570 | Apollo 17 | |||
76571 | Apollo 17 | |||
76572 | Apollo 17 | |||
76573 | Apollo 17 | |||
76574 | Apollo 17 | |||
77070 | Apollo 17 | |||
77076 | Apollo 17 | |||
77110 | Apollo 17 | |||
77130 | Apollo 17 | |||
77510 | Apollo 17 | |||
77511 | Apollo 17 | |||
77512 | Apollo 17 | |||
77513 | Apollo 17 | |||
77514 | Apollo 17 | |||
78120 | Apollo 17 | |||
78121 | Apollo 17 | |||
78122 | Apollo 17 | |||
78123 | Apollo 17 | |||
78124 | Apollo 17 | |||
78130 | Apollo 17 | |||
78150 | Apollo 17 | |||
78221 | Apollo 17 | |||
78222 | Apollo 17 | |||
78223 | Apollo 17 | |||
78224 | Apollo 17 | |||
78230 | Apollo 17 | |||
78231 | Apollo 17 | |||
78232 | Apollo 17 | |||
78233 | Apollo 17 | |||
78234 | Apollo 17 | |||
78237 | Apollo 17 | |||
78250 | Apollo 17 | |||
78421 | Apollo 17 | |||
78422 | Apollo 17 | |||
78423 | Apollo 17 | |||
78424 | Apollo 17 | |||
78440 | Apollo 17 | |||
78441 | Apollo 17 | |||
78442 | Apollo 17 | |||
78443 | Apollo 17 | |||
78444 | Apollo 17 | |||
78461 | Apollo 17 | |||
78462 | Apollo 17 | |||
78463 | Apollo 17 | |||
78464 | Apollo 17 | |||
78481 | Apollo 17 | |||
78482 | Apollo 17 | |||
78483 | Apollo 17 | |||
78484 | Apollo 17 | |||
78501 | Apollo 17 | |||
78502 | Apollo 17 | |||
78503 | Apollo 17 | |||
78504 | Apollo 17 | |||
78510 | Apollo 17 | |||
78511 | Apollo 17 | |||
78512 | Apollo 17 | |||
78513 | Apollo 17 | |||
78514 | Apollo 17 | |||
78530 | Apollo 17 | |||
78540 | Apollo 17 | |||
78541 | Apollo 17 | |||
78542 | Apollo 17 | |||
78543 | Apollo 17 | |||
78544 | Apollo 17 | |||
78550 | Apollo 17 | |||
78551 | Apollo 17 | |||
78552 | Apollo 17 | |||
78553 | Apollo 17 | |||
78554 | Apollo 17 | |||
78560 | Apollo 17 | |||
78561 | Apollo 17 | |||
78563 | Apollo 17 | |||
78564 | Apollo 17 | |||
78570 | Apollo 17 | |||
78571 | Apollo 17 | |||
78572 | Apollo 17 | |||
78573 | Apollo 17 | |||
78574 | Apollo 17 | |||
78580 | Apollo 17 | |||
78581 | Apollo 17 | |||
78582 | Apollo 17 | |||
78583 | Apollo 17 | |||
78584 | Apollo 17 | |||
78590 | Apollo 17 | |||
78591 | Apollo 17 | |||
78592 | Apollo 17 | |||
78593 | Apollo 17 | |||
78594 | Apollo 17 | |||
79110 | Apollo 17 | |||
79120 | Apollo 17 | |||
79121 | Apollo 17 | |||
79122 | Apollo 17 | |||
79123 | Apollo 17 | |||
79124 | Apollo 17 | |||
79130 | Apollo 17 | |||
79170 | Apollo 17 | |||
79190 | Apollo 17 | |||
79221 | Apollo 17 | |||
79222 | Apollo 17 | |||
79223 | Apollo 17 | |||
79224 | Apollo 17 | |||
79241 | Apollo 17 | |||
79242 | Apollo 17 | |||
79243 | Apollo 17 | |||
79244 | Apollo 17 | |||
79261 | Apollo 17 | |||
79262 | Apollo 17 | |||
79263 | Apollo 17 | |||
79264 | Apollo 17 | |||
79511 | Apollo 17 | |||
79512 | Apollo 17 | |||
79513 | Apollo 17 | |||
79514 | Apollo 17 | |||
79520 | Apollo 17 | |||
79521 | Apollo 17 | |||
79522 | Apollo 17 | |||
79523 | Apollo 17 | |||
79524 | Apollo 17 | |||
79530 | Apollo 17 | |||
79531 | Apollo 17 | |||
79532 | Apollo 17 | |||
79533 | Apollo 17 | |||
79534 | Apollo 17 | |||
10000 | Apollo 11 | |||
10002 | Apollo 11 | |||
10004 | Apollo 11 | core | ||
10005 | Apollo 11 | core | ||
10010 | Apollo 11 | soil | ||
10015 | Apollo 11 | |||
10020 | Apollo 11 | basalt | ||
10022 | Apollo 11 | basalt | ||
10024 | Apollo 11 | basalt | ||
10025 | Apollo 11 | breccia | ||
10026 | Apollo 11 | regolith breccia | ||
10027 | Apollo 11 | breccia | ||
10028 | Apollo 11 | breccia | ||
10029 | Apollo 11 | basalt | ||
10030 | Apollo 11 | |||
10031 | Apollo 11 | basalt | ||
10032 | Apollo 11 | basalt | ||
10044 | Apollo 11 | basalt | ||
10045 | Apollo 11 | basalt | ||
10046 | Apollo 11 | breccia | ||
10050 | Apollo 11 | basalt | ||
10057 | Apollo 11 | basalt | ||
10058 | Apollo 11 | basalt | ||
10060 | Apollo 11 | breccia | ||
10062 | Apollo 11 | basalt | ||
10065 | Apollo 11 | breccia | ||
10068 | Apollo 11 | breccia | ||
10069 | Apollo 11 | basalt | ||
10071 | Apollo 11 | basalt | ||
10072 | Apollo 11 | basalt | ||
10072A | Apollo 11 | |||
10072D | Apollo 11 | |||
10085 | Apollo 11 | |||
10092 | Apollo 11 | basalt | ||
10119 | Apollo 11 | |||
12002 | Apollo 12 | rock | basalt | |
12009 | Apollo 12 | rock | basalt | |
12010 | Apollo 12 | breccia | ||
12015 | Apollo 12 | basalt | ||
12016 | Apollo 12 | basalt | ||
12017 | Apollo 12 | basalt | ||
12019 | Apollo 12 | basalt | ||
12020 | Apollo 12 | basalt | ||
12021 | Apollo 12 | basalt | ||
12022 | Apollo 12 | basalt | ||
12024 | Apollo 12 | |||
12025 | Apollo 12 | |||
12027 | Apollo 12 | core | ||
12028 | Apollo 12 | |||
12030 | Apollo 12 | |||
12031 | Apollo 12 | basalt | ||
12034 | Apollo 12 | breccia | ||
12035 | Apollo 12 | basalt | ||
12036 | Apollo 12 | basalt | ||
12039 | Apollo 12 | basalt | ||
12040 | Apollo 12 | basalt | ||
12043 | Apollo 12 | basalt | ||
12045 | Apollo 12 | basalt | ||
12046 | Apollo 12 | basalt | ||
12047 | Apollo 12 | basalt | ||
12051 | Apollo 12 | basalt | ||
12052 | Apollo 12 | basalt | ||
12053 | Apollo 12 | basalt | ||
12054 | Apollo 12 | basalt | ||
12055 | Apollo 12 | basalt | ||
12056 | Apollo 12 | basalt | ||
12062 | Apollo 12 | basalt | ||
12064 | Apollo 12 | basalt | ||
12070 | Apollo 12 | |||
12072 | Apollo 12 | basalt | ||
12073 | Apollo 12 | breccia | ||
12075 | Apollo 12 | basalt | ||
12076 | Apollo 12 | basalt | ||
12077 | Apollo 12 | basalt | ||
14035 | Apollo 14 | |||
14046 | Apollo 14 | |||
14048 | Apollo 14 | |||
14052 | Apollo 14 | |||
14054 | Apollo 14 | |||
14067 | Apollo 14 | |||
14084 | Apollo 14 | |||
14140 | Apollo 14 | |||
14142 | Apollo 14 | |||
14143 | Apollo 14 | |||
14144 | Apollo 14 | |||
14165 | Apollo 14 | |||
14166 | Apollo 14 | |||
14167 | Apollo 14 | |||
14168 | Apollo 14 | basalt | ||
14189 | Apollo 14 | |||
14210 | Apollo 14 | core | ||
14211 | Apollo 14 | core | ||
14220 | Apollo 14 | core | ||
14240 | Apollo 14 | |||
14300 | Apollo 14 | |||
14302 | Apollo 14 | rock | ||
14308 | Apollo 14 | |||
14411 | Apollo 14 | |||
14414 | Apollo 14 | |||
14421 | Apollo 14 | |||
14434 | Apollo 14 | |||
15000 | Apollo 15 | rake | ||
15009 | Apollo 15 | core | ||
15013 | Apollo 15 | soil | ||
15018 | Apollo 15 | |||
15019 | Apollo 15 | |||
15021 | Apollo 15 | |||
15024 | Apollo 15 | |||
15026 | Apollo 15 | |||
15031 | Apollo 15 | |||
15032 | Apollo 15 | |||
15033 | Apollo 15 | |||
15034 | Apollo 15 | |||
15041 | Apollo 15 | |||
15042 | Apollo 15 | |||
15043 | Apollo 15 | |||
15044 | Apollo 15 | |||
15058 | Apollo 15 | basalt | ||
15071 | Apollo 15 | |||
15072 | Apollo 15 | |||
15073 | Apollo 15 | |||
15074 | Apollo 15 | rake | ||
15080 | Apollo 15 | |||
15081 | Apollo 15 | |||
15082 | Apollo 15 | |||
15083 | Apollo 15 | |||
15084 | Apollo 15 | |||
15087 | Apollo 15 | |||
15088 | Apollo 15 | |||
15092 | Apollo 15 | |||
15093 | Apollo 15 | |||
15095 | Apollo 15 | breccia | ||
15101 | Apollo 15 | |||
15102 | Apollo 15 | |||
15103 | Apollo 15 | |||
15104 | Apollo 15 | |||
15124 | Apollo 15 | |||
15135 | Apollo 15 | |||
15146 | Apollo 15 | |||
15147 | Apollo 15 | |||
15148 | Apollo 15 | |||
15202 | Apollo 15 | |||
15203 | Apollo 15 | |||
15204 | Apollo 15 | |||
15208 | Apollo 15 | |||
15221 | Apollo 15 | |||
15222 | Apollo 15 | |||
15223 | Apollo 15 | |||
15224 | Apollo 15 | |||
15231 | Apollo 15 | soil | ||
15232 | Apollo 15 | |||
15233 | Apollo 15 | |||
15234 | Apollo 15 | |||
15251 | Apollo 15 | |||
15252 | Apollo 15 | |||
15253 | Apollo 15 | |||
15254 | Apollo 15 | |||
15258 | Apollo 15 | |||
15259 | Apollo 15 | |||
15261 | Apollo 15 | soil | ||
15262 | Apollo 15 | |||
15263 | Apollo 15 | |||
15264 | Apollo 15 | |||
15266 | Apollo 15 | breccia | ||
15267 | Apollo 15 | breccia | ||
15268 | Apollo 15 | |||
15269 | Apollo 15 | |||
15272 | Apollo 15 | |||
15273 | Apollo 15 | |||
15274 | Apollo 15 | |||
15281 | Apollo 15 | |||
15282 | Apollo 15 | |||
15283 | Apollo 15 | |||
15284 | Apollo 15 | |||
15292 | Apollo 15 | |||
15293 | Apollo 15 | |||
15294 | Apollo 15 | |||
15297 | Apollo 15 | regolith breccia | ||
15302 | Apollo 15 | |||
15303 | Apollo 15 | |||
15304 | Apollo 15 | |||
15305 | Apollo 15 | |||
15306 | Apollo 15 | rake | regolith breccia | |
15310 | Apollo 15 | |||
15312 | Apollo 15 | |||
15313 | Apollo 15 | |||
15314 | Apollo 15 | |||
15316 | Apollo 15 | |||
15317 | Apollo 15 | |||
15318 | Apollo 15 | |||
15319 | Apollo 15 | |||
15320 | Apollo 15 | |||
15321 | Apollo 15 | |||
15322 | Apollo 15 | |||
15323 | Apollo 15 | |||
15326 | Apollo 15 | |||
15327 | Apollo 15 | |||
15328 | Apollo 15 | |||
15329 | Apollo 15 | |||
15331 | Apollo 15 | |||
15332 | Apollo 15 | |||
15333 | Apollo 15 | |||
15334 | Apollo 15 | |||
15335 | Apollo 15 | |||
15336 | Apollo 15 | |||
15337 | Apollo 15 | |||
15338 | Apollo 15 | |||
15339 | Apollo 15 | |||
15340 | Apollo 15 | |||
15341 | Apollo 15 | |||
15342 | Apollo 15 | |||
15343 | Apollo 15 | |||
15344 | Apollo 15 | |||
15345 | Apollo 15 | |||
15346 | Apollo 15 | |||
15347 | Apollo 15 | |||
15348 | Apollo 15 | |||
15349 | Apollo 15 | |||
15350 | Apollo 15 | |||
15351 | Apollo 15 | |||
15352 | Apollo 15 | |||
15353 | Apollo 15 | |||
15354 | Apollo 15 | |||
15355 | Apollo 15 | |||
15360 | Apollo 15 | |||
15361 | Apollo 15 | |||
15363 | Apollo 15 | |||
15364 | Apollo 15 | |||
15365 | Apollo 15 | |||
15366 | Apollo 15 | |||
15367 | Apollo 15 | |||
15368 | Apollo 15 | |||
15369 | Apollo 15 | |||
15370 | Apollo 15 | |||
15371 | Apollo 15 | |||
15372 | Apollo 15 | |||
15373 | Apollo 15 | |||
15374 | Apollo 15 | |||
15375 | Apollo 15 | |||
15376 | Apollo 15 | |||
15377 | Apollo 15 | |||
15378 | Apollo 15 | |||
15381 | Apollo 15 | |||
15383 | Apollo 15 | |||
15384 | Apollo 15 | |||
15389 | Apollo 15 | |||
15390 | Apollo 15 | |||
15391 | Apollo 15 | |||
15392 | Apollo 15 | |||
15402 | Apollo 15 | |||
15403 | Apollo 15 | |||
15404 | Apollo 15 | |||
15411 | Apollo 15 | |||
15412 | Apollo 15 | |||
15413 | Apollo 15 | |||
15414 | Apollo 15 | |||
15416 | Apollo 15 | |||
15417 | Apollo 15 | |||
15419 | Apollo 15 | |||
15421 | Apollo 15 | |||
15422 | Apollo 15 | |||
15423 | Apollo 15 | |||
15424 | Apollo 15 | |||
15431 | Apollo 15 | soil | ||
15432 | Apollo 15 | |||
15433 | Apollo 15 | |||
15434 | Apollo 15 | |||
15437 | Apollo 15 | |||
15467 | Apollo 15 | breccia | ||
15468 | Apollo 15 | breccia | ||
15469 | Apollo 15 | |||
15472 | Apollo 15 | |||
15473 | Apollo 15 | |||
15474 | Apollo 15 | |||
15477 | Apollo 15 | |||
15478 | Apollo 15 | |||
15487 | Apollo 15 | |||
15501 | Apollo 15 | rake | soil | |
15502 | Apollo 15 | |||
15503 | Apollo 15 | |||
15504 | Apollo 15 | |||
15514 | Apollo 15 | |||
15528 | Apollo 15 | |||
15532 | Apollo 15 | |||
15533 | Apollo 15 | |||
15534 | Apollo 15 | |||
15537 | Apollo 15 | |||
15538 | Apollo 15 | |||
15548 | Apollo 15 | |||
15557 | Apollo 15 | basalt | ||
15560 | Apollo 15 | |||
15564 | Apollo 15 | |||
15577 | Apollo 15 | |||
15602 | Apollo 15 | |||
15603 | Apollo 15 | |||
15604 | Apollo 15 | |||
15609 | Apollo 15 | |||
15611 | Apollo 15 | |||
15612 | Apollo 15 | rake | ||
15613 | Apollo 15 | rake | ||
15615 | Apollo 15 | rake | ||
15617 | Apollo 15 | rake | ||
15618 | Apollo 15 | rake | ||
15619 | Apollo 15 | rake | ||
15621 | Apollo 15 | rake | ||
15624 | Apollo 15 | rake | ||
15625 | Apollo 15 | rake | ||
15626 | Apollo 15 | rake | ||
15627 | Apollo 15 | rake | ||
15628 | Apollo 15 | rake | ||
15629 | Apollo 15 | rake | ||
15631 | Apollo 15 | rake | ||
15632 | Apollo 15 | rake | ||
15635 | Apollo 15 | rake | ||
15637 | Apollo 15 | rake | ||
15638 | Apollo 15 | rake | ||
15640 | Apollo 15 | rake | ||
15642 | Apollo 15 | rake | ||
15644 | Apollo 15 | rake | ||
15645 | Apollo 15 | rake | ||
15646 | Apollo 15 | rake | ||
15650 | Apollo 15 | rake | ||
15652 | Apollo 15 | rake | ||
15653 | Apollo 15 | rake | ||
15654 | Apollo 15 | rake | ||
15655 | Apollo 15 | rake | ||
15656 | Apollo 15 | rake | ||
15657 | Apollo 15 | rake | ||
15660 | Apollo 15 | rake | ||
15664 | Apollo 15 | rake | ||
15667 | Apollo 15 | rake | ||
15668 | Apollo 15 | rake | ||
15670 | Apollo 15 | rake | ||
15671 | Apollo 15 | rake | ||
15673 | Apollo 15 | rake | ||
15677 | Apollo 15 | rake | ||
15679 | Apollo 15 | rake | ||
15680 | Apollo 15 | rake | ||
15681 | Apollo 15 | rake | ||
15684 | Apollo 15 | rake | ||
15685 | Apollo 15 | rake | ||
15686 | Apollo 15 | rake | ||
15687 | Apollo 15 | rake | ||
15688 | Apollo 15 | rake | ||
15689 | Apollo 15 | rake | ||
15933 | Apollo 15 | |||
15952 | Apollo 15 | |||
60013 | Apollo 16 | core | ||
60030 | Apollo 16 | |||
60031 | Apollo 16 | |||
60032 | Apollo 16 | |||
60033 | Apollo 16 | |||
60034 | Apollo 16 | |||
60051 | Apollo 16 | |||
60052 | Apollo 16 | |||
60053 | Apollo 16 | |||
60054 | Apollo 16 | |||
60070 | Apollo 16 | |||
60110 | Apollo 16 | |||
60130 | Apollo 16 | |||
60210 | Apollo 16 | |||
60230 | Apollo 16 | |||
60250 | Apollo 16 | |||
60270 | Apollo 16 | |||
60310 | Apollo 16 | |||
60330 | Apollo 16 | |||
60501 | Apollo 16 | rake | soil | |
60502 | Apollo 16 | rake | soil | |
60503 | Apollo 16 | rake | soil | |
60504 | Apollo 16 | rake | soil | |
60510 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
60511 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
60512 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
60513 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
60514 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
60520 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
60521 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
60522 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
60523 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
60524 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
60527 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
60528 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
60529 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
60530 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
60531 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
60532 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
60533 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
60534 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
60601 | Apollo 16 | rake | soil | |
60602 | Apollo 16 | rake | soil | |
60603 | Apollo 16 | rake | soil | |
60604 | Apollo 16 | rake | soil | |
60611 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
60612 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
60613 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
60614 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
60616 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | |
60617 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | |
60620 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
60621 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
60622 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
60623 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
60624 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
60628 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
60630 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
60631 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
60632 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
60633 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
60634 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
60638 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
60640 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
60641 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
60642 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
60643 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
60644 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
60646 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
60647 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
60648 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
60649 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
60650 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
60651 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
60652 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
60653 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
60654 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
60655 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
60656 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
60657 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
60658 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
60660 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
60661 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
60662 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
60663 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
60664 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
60667 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
60668 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
60669 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
60670 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
60671 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
60672 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
60673 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
60674 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
60675 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
60676 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
60677 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | |
60678 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
60679 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
61130 | Apollo 16 | |||
61140 | Apollo 16 | soil | ||
61141 | Apollo 16 | |||
61142 | Apollo 16 | |||
61143 | Apollo 16 | |||
61144 | Apollo 16 | |||
61150 | Apollo 16 | |||
61161 | Apollo 16 | |||
61162 | Apollo 16 | |||
61163 | Apollo 16 | |||
61164 | Apollo 16 | |||
61170 | Apollo 16 | |||
61181 | Apollo 16 | |||
61182 | Apollo 16 | |||
61183 | Apollo 16 | |||
61184 | Apollo 16 | |||
61190 | Apollo 16 | |||
61221 | Apollo 16 | |||
61222 | Apollo 16 | |||
61223 | Apollo 16 | |||
61226 | Apollo 16 | |||
61241 | Apollo 16 | |||
61242 | Apollo 16 | |||
61243 | Apollo 16 | |||
61244 | Apollo 16 | |||
61245 | Apollo 16 | |||
61246 | Apollo 16 | |||
61247 | Apollo 16 | |||
61248 | Apollo 16 | |||
61249 | Apollo 16 | |||
61255 | Apollo 16 | |||
61280 | Apollo 16 | |||
61281 | Apollo 16 | |||
61282 | Apollo 16 | |||
61283 | Apollo 16 | |||
61284 | Apollo 16 | |||
61290 | Apollo 16 | |||
61501 | Apollo 16 | |||
61502 | Apollo 16 | |||
61503 | Apollo 16 | |||
61504 | Apollo 16 | |||
61505 | Apollo 16 | |||
61525 | Apollo 16 | breccia | ||
61535 | Apollo 16 | rake | basalt | |
61537 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | |
61538 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | |
61539 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | |
61545 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | |
61555 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | |
61556 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | |
61557 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | |
61558 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | |
61559 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | |
61565 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | |
61566 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | |
61567 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | |
61575 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | |
61576 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | |
61577 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | |
62230 | Apollo 16 | |||
62231 | Apollo 16 | rake | soil | |
62232 | Apollo 16 | |||
62233 | Apollo 16 | |||
62234 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
62238 | Apollo 16 | |||
62240 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
62241 | Apollo 16 | |||
62242 | Apollo 16 | |||
62243 | Apollo 16 | |||
62244 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | |
62245 | Apollo 16 | |||
62246 | Apollo 16 | |||
62247 | Apollo 16 | |||
62248 | Apollo 16 | |||
62249 | Apollo 16 | |||
62250 | Apollo 16 | |||
62270 | Apollo 16 | |||
62281 | Apollo 16 | soil | ||
62282 | Apollo 16 | |||
62283 | Apollo 16 | |||
62284 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | |
62285 | Apollo 16 | |||
62286 | Apollo 16 | |||
62287 | Apollo 16 | |||
62288 | Apollo 16 | |||
62289 | Apollo 16 | |||
62305 | Apollo 16 | |||
62315 | Apollo 16 | |||
62566 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
62567 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
63235 | Apollo 16 | |||
63321 | Apollo 16 | soil | ||
63322 | Apollo 16 | soil | ||
63323 | Apollo 16 | soil | ||
63324 | Apollo 16 | rake | soil | |
63340 | Apollo 16 | soil | ||
63341 | Apollo 16 | soil | ||
63342 | Apollo 16 | soil | ||
63343 | Apollo 16 | soil | ||
63344 | Apollo 16 | rake | soil | |
63501 | Apollo 16 | |||
63502 | Apollo 16 | |||
63503 | Apollo 16 | |||
63504 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
63505 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
63508 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | |
63509 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | |
63515 | Apollo 16 | rake | breccia | |
63520 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
63521 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
63522 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
63523 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
63524 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
63527 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
63530 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
63531 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
63532 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
63533 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
63534 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
63540 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
63541 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
63542 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
63543 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
63544 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
63546 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
63547 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
63550 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
63551 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
63552 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
63553 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
63554 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
63558 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
63560 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
63561 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
63562 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
63563 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
63564 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
63569 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
63570 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
63571 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
63572 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
63573 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
63574 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
63577 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
63579 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
63580 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
63581 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
63582 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
63583 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
63584 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
63589 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
63590 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
63591 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
63592 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
63593 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
63594 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
64421 | Apollo 16 | |||
64422 | Apollo 16 | |||
64423 | Apollo 16 | |||
64424 | Apollo 16 | |||
64430 | Apollo 16 | |||
64450 | Apollo 16 | |||
64470 | Apollo 16 | |||
64502 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
64503 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
64504 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
64505 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
64506 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
64507 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
64508 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
64509 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
64510 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
64511 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
64512 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
64513 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
64514 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
64515 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
64516 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
64517 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
64518 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
64519 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
64520 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
64521 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
64522 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
64523 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
64525 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
64530 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
64531 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
64532 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
64533 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
64534 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
64540 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
64541 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
64542 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
64543 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
64544 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
64550 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
64551 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
64552 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
64553 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
64554 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
64560 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
64561 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
64562 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
64563 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
64564 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
64565 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
64570 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
64571 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
64572 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
64573 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
64574 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
64575 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
64577 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
64578 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
64579 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
64580 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
64581 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
64582 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
64583 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
64584 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
64586 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
64587 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
64588 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
64589 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
64802 | Apollo 16 | |||
64803 | Apollo 16 | |||
64804 | Apollo 16 | |||
64811 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
64812 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
64813 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
64814 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
64819 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
64820 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
64821 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
64822 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
64823 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
64824 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
64830 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
64831 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
64832 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
64833 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
64834 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65030 | Apollo 16 | |||
65050 | Apollo 16 | |||
65070 | Apollo 16 | |||
65090 | Apollo 16 | |||
65310 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65328 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65329 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65335 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65336 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65337 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65338 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65339 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65345 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65346 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65347 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65348 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65349 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65355 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65356 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65359 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65365 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65366 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65502 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65503 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65504 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65511 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65512 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65513 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65514 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65575 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65576 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65577 | Apollo 16 | |||
65578 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65579 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65580 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65581 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65582 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65583 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65584 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65585 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65586 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65587 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65588 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65702 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65703 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65704 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65711 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65712 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65713 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65714 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65716 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65717 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65718 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65719 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65720 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65721 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65722 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65723 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65724 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65725 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65726 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65727 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65728 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65729 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65730 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65731 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65732 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65733 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65734 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65735 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65736 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65737 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65738 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65739 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65740 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65741 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65742 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65743 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65744 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65750 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65751 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65752 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65753 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65754 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65758 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65759 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65760 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65761 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65762 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65763 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65764 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65765 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65766 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65768 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65769 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65770 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65771 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65772 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65773 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65774 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65775 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65776 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65780 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65781 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65782 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65783 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65784 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65788 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65790 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65791 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65792 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65793 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65794 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
65903 | Apollo 16 | |||
65904 | Apollo 16 | |||
65906 | Apollo 16 | |||
65907 | Apollo 16 | |||
65915 | Apollo 16 | |||
65916 | Apollo 16 | |||
66032 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
66033 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
66034 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
66041 | Apollo 16 | soil | ||
66042 | Apollo 16 | |||
66043 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
66044 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
66050 | Apollo 16 | |||
66070 | Apollo 16 | |||
66082 | Apollo 16 | |||
66083 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
66084 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
66085 | Apollo 16 | |||
66086 | Apollo 16 | |||
66090 | Apollo 16 | |||
66236 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67020 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67050 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67070 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67090 | Apollo 16 | |||
67110 | Apollo 16 | |||
67410 | Apollo 16 | |||
67430 | Apollo 16 | |||
67438 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67450 | Apollo 16 | |||
67460 | Apollo 16 | |||
67462 | Apollo 16 | |||
67463 | Apollo 16 | |||
67464 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67482 | Apollo 16 | |||
67483 | Apollo 16 | |||
67484 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67486 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67487 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67489 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67495 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67511 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67512 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67513 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67514 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67520 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67521 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67522 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67523 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67524 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67525 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67526 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67527 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67528 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67530 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67531 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67532 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67533 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67534 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67535 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67536 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67537 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67538 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67539 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67540 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67541 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67542 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67543 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67544 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67547 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67548 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67550 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67551 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67552 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67553 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67554 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67555 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67557 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67558 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67560 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67561 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67562 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67563 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67564 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67570 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67571 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67572 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67573 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67574 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67575 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67576 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67601 | Apollo 16 | rake | soil | |
67602 | Apollo 16 | rake | soil | |
67603 | Apollo 16 | rake | soil | |
67604 | Apollo 16 | rake | soil | |
67611 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67612 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67613 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67614 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67616 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67618 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67619 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67620 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67621 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67622 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67623 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67624 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67625 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67630 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67631 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67632 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67633 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67634 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67638 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67639 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67640 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67641 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67642 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67643 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67644 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67645 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67646 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67648 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67649 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67650 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67651 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67652 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67653 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67654 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67655 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67656 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67657 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67658 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67659 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67660 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67661 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67662 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67663 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67664 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67665 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67666 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67669 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67670 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67671 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67672 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67673 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67674 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67675 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67676 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67701 | Apollo 16 | rake | soil | |
67702 | Apollo 16 | rake | soil | |
67703 | Apollo 16 | rake | soil | |
67704 | Apollo 16 | rake | soil | |
67705 | Apollo 16 | rake | soil | |
67706 | Apollo 16 | rake | soil | |
67707 | Apollo 16 | rake | soil | |
67708 | Apollo 16 | rake | soil | |
67711 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67712 | Apollo 16 | rake | soil | |
67713 | Apollo 16 | rake | soil | |
67714 | Apollo 16 | rake | soil | |
67717 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67720 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67721 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67722 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67723 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67724 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67725 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67726 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67727 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67730 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67731 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67732 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67733 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67734 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67735 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67737 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67738 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67740 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67741 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67742 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67743 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67744 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67745 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67748 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67750 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67751 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67752 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67753 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67754 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67755 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67758 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67760 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67761 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67762 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67763 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67764 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67765 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67767 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67768 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67770 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67771 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67772 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67773 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67774 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67776 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
67910 | Apollo 16 | |||
67930 | Apollo 16 | |||
67942 | Apollo 16 | |||
67943 | Apollo 16 | |||
67944 | Apollo 16 | |||
67950 | Apollo 16 | |||
67956 | Apollo 16 | |||
67957 | Apollo 16 | |||
67960 | Apollo 16 | |||
67976 | Apollo 16 | |||
68002 | Apollo 16 | core | ||
68030 | Apollo 16 | |||
68110 | Apollo 16 | |||
68120 | Apollo 16 | soil | ||
68121 | Apollo 16 | soil | ||
68122 | Apollo 16 | soil | ||
68123 | Apollo 16 | soil | ||
68124 | Apollo 16 | soil | ||
68410 | Apollo 16 | |||
68501 | Apollo 16 | rake | soil | |
68502 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
68503 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
68504 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
68505 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
68510 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
68511 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
68512 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
68513 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
68514 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
68517 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
68520 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
68521 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
68522 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
68523 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
68524 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
68528 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
68529 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
68530 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
68531 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
68532 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
68533 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
68534 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
68537 | Apollo 16 | rake | ||
68820 | Apollo 16 | |||
68822 | Apollo 16 | |||
68823 | Apollo 16 | |||
68824 | Apollo 16 | |||
68825 | Apollo 16 | |||
68840 | Apollo 16 | soil | ||
68842 | Apollo 16 | |||
68843 | Apollo 16 | |||
68844 | Apollo 16 | |||
68848 | Apollo 16 | |||
69003 | Apollo 16 | |||
69004 | Apollo 16 | |||
69921 | Apollo 16 | |||
69922 | Apollo 16 | |||
69923 | Apollo 16 | |||
69924 | Apollo 16 | |||
69930 | Apollo 16 | |||
69941 | Apollo 16 | |||
69942 | Apollo 16 | |||
69943 | Apollo 16 | |||
69944 | Apollo 16 | |||
69950 | Apollo 16 | |||
69961 | Apollo 16 | soil | ||
69962 | Apollo 16 | soil | ||
69963 | Apollo 16 | soil | ||
69964 | Apollo 16 | soil | ||
69965 | Apollo 16 | soil | ||
17508 | Apollo 17 | |||
70001 | Apollo 17 | core | ||
70002 | Apollo 17 | core | ||
70003 | Apollo 17 | core | ||
70004 | Apollo 17 | core | ||
70005 | Apollo 17 | core | ||
70006 | Apollo 17 | core | ||
70007 | Apollo 17 | soil | ||
70009 | Apollo 17 | core | soil | |
70130 | Apollo 17 | |||
70131 | Apollo 17 | |||
70132 | Apollo 17 | |||
70133 | Apollo 17 | |||
70134 | Apollo 17 | |||
70140 | Apollo 17 | |||
70141 | Apollo 17 | |||
70142 | Apollo 17 | |||
70143 | Apollo 17 | |||
70144 | Apollo 17 | |||
70150 | Apollo 17 | |||
70151 | Apollo 17 | |||
70152 | Apollo 17 | |||
70153 | Apollo 17 | |||
70154 | Apollo 17 | |||
70161 | Apollo 17 | soil <1 mm | soil | |
70170 | Apollo 17 | |||
70181 | Apollo 17 | |||
70182 | Apollo 17 | |||
70183 | Apollo 17 | |||
70184 | Apollo 17 | |||
70250 | Apollo 17 | |||
70270 | Apollo 17 | |||
70310 | Apollo 17 | |||
70311 | Apollo 17 | |||
70312 | Apollo 17 | |||
70313 | Apollo 17 | |||
70314 | Apollo 17 | |||
70320 | Apollo 17 | |||
70321 | Apollo 17 | |||
70322 | Apollo 17 | |||
70323 | Apollo 17 | |||
70324 | Apollo 17 | |||
71030 | Apollo 17 | |||
71031 | Apollo 17 | |||
71032 | Apollo 17 | |||
71033 | Apollo 17 | |||
71034 | Apollo 17 | |||
71041 | Apollo 17 | |||
71042 | Apollo 17 | |||
71043 | Apollo 17 | |||
71044 | Apollo 17 | |||
71050 | Apollo 17 | |||
71061 | Apollo 17 |