71 research outputs found
Multiple formation mechanisms of ferrous olivine in CV carbonaceous chondrites during fluid-assisted metamorphism
The CV carbonaceous chondrites experienced alteration that resulted in formation of secondary ferrous olivine (Fa40-100), salite-hedenbergite pyroxenes (Fs10-50Wo45-50), wollastonite, andradite, nepheline, sodalite, phyllosilicates, magnetite, Fe,Ni-sulfides and Ni-rich metal in their Ca,Al-rich inclusions, amoeboid olivine ag-gregates, chondrules, and matrices. It has previously been suggested that fibrous ferrous olivine in dark inclusions in CV chondrites formed by dehydration of phyllosilicates during thermal metamorphism (T. Kojima and K. Tomeoka, Geochim. Cosmochim. Acta, 60, 2651, 1996; A.N. Krot et al., Meteoritics, 30, 748, 1995). This mechanism has been subsequently applied to explain the origin of ferrous olivine in the CV chondrules and matrices (A.N. Krot et al., Meteoritics, 32, 31, 1997). It is, however, inconsistent with the lack of significant fractionation of bulk oxygen isotope compositions of the CV chondrites and the Allende dark inclusions and the common occurrences of ferrous olivine in the aqueously-altered and virtually unmetamorphosed oxidized CV chondrites of the Bali-like subgroup. Based on the petrographic observations and the isotopic compositions of ferrous olivine and coexisting Ca,Fe-rich silicates in CV chondrites and their dark inclusions, we infer that ferrous olivine formed during a fluid-assisted metamorphism by several mechanisms: (i) replacement of Fe,Ni-metal±sulfide nodules, (ii) replacement of magnesian olivine and low-Ca pyroxene, and (iii) direct precipitation from an aqueous solution. Dehydration of phyllosilicates appear to have played only a minor (if any) role. Although our model does not address specifically the origin of ferrous olivine rims around forsterite grains in Allende, the observed homogenization of matrix olivines (which have comparable sizes to thicknesses of the ferrous olivine rims in Allende) from Kaba to Allende suggests that compositions of ferrous olivine rims in Allende cannot be primary and must have been modified by asteroidal alteration
40Ar/39Ar impact ages and time-temperature argon diffusion history of the Bunburra Rockhole anomalous basaltic achondrite
The Bunburra Rockhole meteorite is a brecciated anomalous basaltic achondrite containing coarse-, medium- and fine-grained lithologies. Petrographic observations constrain the limited shock pressure to between ca. 10 GPa and 20 GPa. In this study, we carried out nine 40Ar/39Ar step-heating experiments on distinct single-grain fragments extracted from the coarse and fine lithologies. We obtained six plateau ages and three mini-plateau ages. These ages fall into two internally concordant populations with mean ages of 3640 ± 21 Ma (n=7; P=0.53) and 3544 ± 26 Ma (n=2; P=0.54), respectively. Based on these results, additional 40Ar/39Ar data of fusion crust fragments, argon diffusion modeling, and petrographic observations, we conclude that the principal components of the Bunburra Rockhole basaltic achondrite are from a melt rock formed at ~3.64 Ga by a medium to large impact event. The data imply this impact generated high enough energy to completely melt the basaltic target rock and reset the Ar systematics, but only partially reset the Pb-Pb age. We also conclude that a complete 40Ar* resetting of pyroxene and plagioclase at this time could not have been achieved at solid-state conditions. Comparison with a terrestrial analogue (Lonar crater) shows that the time-temperature conditions required to melt basaltic target rocks upon impact are relatively easy to achieve. Ar data also suggest that a second medium-size impact event occurred on a neighboring part of the same target rock at ~3.54 Ga. Concordant low-temperature step ages of the nine aliquots suggest that, at ~3.42 Ga, a third smaller impact excavated parts of the ~3.64 Ga and ~3.54 Ga melt rocks and brought the fragments together. The lack of significant impact activity after 3.5 Ga, as recorded by the Bunburra Rockhole suggest that (1) either the meteorite was ejected in a small secondary parent body where it resided untouched by large impacts, or (2) it was covered by a porous heat-absorbing regolith blanket which, when combined with the diminishing frequency of large impacts in the solar system, protected Bunburra from subsequent major heating events. Finally we note that the total (K/Ar) resetting impact event history recorded by some of the brecciated eucrites (peak at 3.8-3.5 Ga) is similar to the large impact history recorded by the Bunburra Rockhole parent body (ca. 3.64-3.54 Ga; this study) and could indicate a similar position in the asteroid belt at that time
Shocked Quartz in Polymict Impact Breccia from the Upper Cretaceous Yallalie Impact Structure in Western Australia
Yallalie is a ~12 km diameter circular structure located ~200 km north of Perth, Australia. Previous studies have proposed that the buried structure is a complex impact crater based on geophysical data. Allochthonous breccia exposed near the structure has previously been interpreted as proximal impact ejecta; however, no diagnostic indicators of shock metamorphism have been found. Here we report multiple (27) shocked quartz grains containing planar fractures (PFs) and planar deformation features (PDFs) in the breccia. The PFs occur in up to five sets per grain, while the PDFs occur in up to four sets per grain. Universal stage measurements of all 27 shocked quartz grains confirms that the planar microstructures occur in known crystallographic orientations in quartz corresponding to shock compression from 5 to 20 GPa. Proximity to the buried structure (~4 km) and occurrence of shocked quartz indicates that the breccia represents either primary or reworked ejecta. Ejecta distribution simulated using iSALE hydrocode predicts the same distribution of shock levels at the site as those found in the breccia, which supports a primary ejecta interpretation, although local reworking cannot be excluded. The Yallalie impact event is stratigraphically constrained to have occurred in the interval from 89.8 to 83.6 Ma based on the occurrence of Coniacian clasts in the breccia and undisturbed overlying Santonian to Campanian sedimentary rocks. Yallalie is thus the first confirmed Upper Cretaceous impact structure in Australia
Training Spacecraft Payload Developers in 10 Days: The BinarX 2024 School Holiday Program
The Space Science and Technology Centre\u27s BinarX outreach program aims to enable Western Australian high school students to build their own spacecraft payloads (instruments or demonstrations) to fly in space on future Binar spacecraft. The aims of the program are to inspire and develop the next generation of aerospace professionals in our local community. Throughout the two-year pilot phase run in two high schools, the participants successfully developed space mission concepts that were relevant to them and achievable within the constraints of a 1U spacecraft platform. In particular, the background learning, mission concept design and requirements development (including a mission concept review and requirements review) progressed well in this environment which consisted of a mix of incursions, excursions, and teacher-facilitated activities
Iron projectile fractionation processes in siliceous glass from small impact craters
Detection of extra-terrestrial geochemical components in melt generated during meteorite impact provides diagnostic evidence that can be used to confirm a hypervelocity impact event, and in some cases, classify the projectile. However, projectile contamination is often present at sub-percent levels, and can be difficult to detect. In contrast, meteoritic abundances in glass from small impact craters (<1 km diameter) formed by iron meteorites can be anomalously high, which has been attributed to glass originating from the projectile-target interface. Emulsion textures, immiscible liquids, metal spherules, and non-meteoritic siderophile element ratios have been cited as evidence that the projectile component is typically fractionated in impact glass. Here we present compositional data for impact glass from the Henbury crater field in Australia, where the largest crater is 145 m in diameter and the subgreywacke target rock and IIIAB iron projectile are geochemically distinct. Mixing models (Fe-Si, Ni-Co, Cr-Ir) and high platinum group element abundances indicate average projectile contributions ranging from 3 to 13 % in Henbury glass, comparable to ranges reported in glass from the Kamil (Egypt) and Wabar (Saudi Arabia) impact craters. However meteoritic siderophile element ratios (Fe:Ni, Fe:Co, Ni:Co) in Henbury glass appear nearly unfractionated, whereas Wabar and Kamil glasses have more fractionated ratios. Observed variations are attributed to fractionation of meteoritic Ni by formation of immiscible Ni-rich spherules during oxidation of meteoritic iron, and subsequent separation of Ni-rich spherules from glass during ejection. The Henbury glass sample analyzed is interpreted as an example of an interface melt that quenched prior to extensive oxidation and phase separation, and thus may represent one of the least fractionated samples of melt from the projectile-target interface described thus far, whereas Wabar and Kamil glasses record more evidence of fractionation processes. These results further highlight the influence of metal spherule formation on the composition of ejected glass from small impact structures formed by iron meteorites and provide new insights that explain textural features observed in natural impact glasses
The fusion crust of the Winchcombe meteorite: A preserved record of atmospheric entry processes
Fusion crusts form during the atmospheric entry heating of meteorites and preserve a record of the conditions that occurred during deceleration in the atmosphere. The fusion crust of the Winchcombe meteorite closely resembles that of other stony meteorites, and in particular CM2 chondrites, since it is dominated by olivine phenocrysts set in a glassy mesostasis with magnetite, and is highly vesicular. Dehydration cracks are unusually abundant in Winchcombe. Failure of this weak layer is an additional ablation mechanism to produce large numbers of particles during deceleration, consistent with the observation of pulses of plasma in videos of the Winchcombe fireball. Calving events might provide an observable phenomenon related to meteorites that are particularly susceptible to dehydration. Oscillatory zoning is observed within olivine phenocrysts in the fusion crust, in contrast to other meteorites, perhaps owing to temperature fluctuations resulting from calving events. Magnetite monolayers are found in the crust, and have also not been previously reported, and form discontinuous strata. These features grade into magnetite rims formed on the external surface of the crust and suggest the trapping of surface magnetite by collapse of melt. Magnetite monolayers may be a feature of meteorites that undergo significant degassing. Silicate warts with dendritic textures were observed and are suggested to be droplets ablated from another stone in the shower. They, therefore, represent the first evidence for intershower transfer of ablation materials and are consistent with the other evidence in the Winchcombe meteorite for unusually intense gas loss and ablation, despite its low entry velocity
The Australian Desert Fireball Network: A new era for planetary science
Through an international collaboration between Imperial College London, the Ondrejov Observatory in the Czech Republic and the Western Australian Museum, the installation of the Australian Desert Fireball Network in the Nullarbor Region of Western Australia was completed in 2007. Currently, the Network, which is the first to be established in the southern hemisphere, comprises four all-sky autonomous observatories providing precise triangulation of fireball records to constrain pre-atmospheric orbits and fall positions of meteorites over an area of approximately 200 000 km2. To date, the Network has led to the successful recovery of two observed meteorite falls. The first recovery was three fragments (174, 150 and 14.9 g) of the same meteorite fall recorded on 20 July 2007 at 19 h 13 m 53.2 s±0.1 s UT that were found within 100 m of the predicted fall line. Named Bunburra Rockhole, the meteorite is a basaltic achondrite with an oxygen isotopic composition (Δ 17O = -0.112 %) distinguishing it from basaltic meteorites belonging to the Howardite–Eucrite–Diogenite clan thought to be derived from asteroid 4Vesta, and therefore must have come from another differentiated asteroid in the terrestrial planet region. Bunburra Rockhole was delivered to Earth from an Aten-like orbit that was almost entirely contained within the Earth’s orbit. The second recovered fall was detected by the Network on 13 April 2010 and led to the recovery of a 24.54 g meteorite fragment that is yet to be fully described. To date, the Network has recorded ~550 fireballs. Records from which precise orbits and trajectories can be determined number ~150. In addition to the two recovered falls twelve fireballs are considered to have resulted in meteorite falls. Of these, four are probable falls (10’s–100 g), and five are certain falls (>100 g). Having proved the potential of the Network, ultimately a large dataset of meteorites with orbits will provide the spatial context for the interpretation of meteorite composition that is currently lacking in planetary science
Rubble pile asteroids are forever
Rubble piles asteroids consist of reassembled fragments from shattered monolithic asteroids and are much more abundant than previously thought in the solar system. Although monolithic asteroids that are a kilometer in diameter have been predicted to have a lifespan of few 100 million years, it is currently not known how durable rubble pile asteroids are. Here, we show that rubble pile asteroids can survive ambient solar system bombardment processes for extremely long periods and potentially 10 times longer than their monolith counterparts. We studied three regolith dust particles recovered by the Hayabusa space probe from the rubble pile asteroid 25143 Itokawa using electron backscatter diffraction, time-of-flight secondary ion mass spectrometry, atom probe tomography, and 40Ar/39Ar dating techniques. Our results show that the particles have only been affected by shock pressure of ca. 5 to 15 GPa. Two particles have 40Ar/39Ar ages of 4,219 ± 35 and 4,149 ± 41 My and when combined with thermal and diffusion models; these results constrain the formation age of the rubble pile structure to ≥4.2 billion years ago. Such a long survival time for an asteroid is attributed to the shock-absorbent nature of rubble pile material and suggests that rubble piles are hard to destroy once they are created. Our results suggest that rubble piles are probably more abundant in the asteroid belt than previously thought and provide constrain to help develop mitigation strategies to prevent asteroid collisions with Earth
The Maia detector array and x-ray fluorescence imaging system: Locating rare precious metal phases in complex samples
X-ray fluorescence images acquired using the Maia large solid-angle detector array and integrated real-time processor on the X-ray Fluorescence Microscopy (XFM) beamline at the Australian Synchrotron capture fine detail in complex natural samples with images beyond 100M pixels. Quantitative methods permit real-time display of deconvoluted element images and for the acquisition of large area XFM images and 3D datasets for fluorescence tomography and chemical state (XANES) imaging. This paper outlines the Maia system and analytical methods and describes the use of the large detector array, with a wide range of X-ray take-off angles, to provide sensitivity to the depth of features, which is used to provide an imaging depth contrast and to determine the depth of rare precious metal particles in complex geological samples. © 2013 SPIE
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