“…First are the basaltic shergottites, which mostly contain pyroxene (average lengths of 0.3 mm, up to 1 mm) and maskelynite and are characterized by the absence of olivine phenocrysts or megacrysts (Figure 3a; e.g., He et al, 2015;Howarth et al, 2018;McSween et al, 1996;Rubin et al, 2000). Second in abundance are the olivine-phyric shergottites, which are porphyritic and contain olivine phenocrysts (sometimes megacrystic with sizes up to 2.5 mm) with later-crystallizing olivine, pyroxene, and maskelynite ( Figure 3b; grains in the groundmass of ∼0.25 mm; e.g., Balta et al, 2015;Basu Sarbadhikari et al, 2009;Basu Sarbadhikari et al, 2016;Chen et al, 2015;Dunham et al, 2019;Goodrich, 2002;Liu et al, 2016a). Third are the poikilitic shergottites that contain olivine chadacrysts (up to 1.8 mm) enclosed by large pyroxene oikocrysts (from 3 to 10 mm in length), with later-crystallizing olivine, pyroxene, and maskelynite ( Figure 3c; Combs et al, 2019;Howarth et al, 2014;Kizovski et al, 2019;Rahib et al, 2019;Walton et al, 2012).…”