Laboratory studies of lunar apatite [Ca5(PO4)3(F,Cl,OH)] have been important for determining the volatile inventory of the interior and the roles volatiles played during the magmatic evolution of the Moon. It has been suggested that high-Ti mare basalts sample volatiles from a distinct reservoir in the lunar mantle. However, there is still debate surrounding the crystallization and post-crystallization history of apatite in those basalts. This information is required before we can use apatite to characterize the abundance or isotopic composition of volatiles in melts or magmatic source regions. Our goal is to investigate the mineral chemistry, crystal structure, and volatile inventory of phosphates in high-Ti basalts from Apollo 11, which will allow us to determine the crystallization history of apatite in these rocks and identify any potential secondary processes that have changed the volatile composition that apatite acquired from the melt.