5 research outputs found
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Pyroxene-plagioclase pallasite Northwest Africa 10019: Where does it belong?
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Choteau makes three: A characterization of the third member of the Vermillion subgroup
The origin of aubrites: Evidence from lithophile trace element abundances and oxygen isotope compositions
We report the abundances of a selected set of “lithophile” trace elements (including lanthanides, actinides and high field strength elements) and high-precision oxygen isotope analyses of a comprehensive suite of aubrites. Two distinct groups of aubrites can be distinguished: (a) the main-group aubrites display flat or light-REE depleted REE patterns with variable Eu and Y anomalies; their pyroxenes are light-REE depleted and show marked negative Eu anomalies; (b) the Mount Egerton enstatites and the silicate fraction from Larned display distinctive light-REE enrichments, and high Th/Sm ratios; Mount Egerton pyroxenes have much less pronounced negative Eu anomalies than pyroxenes from the main-group aubrites.
Leaching experiments were undertaken to investigate the contribution of sulfides to the whole rock budget of the main-group aubrites. Sulfides contain in most cases at least 50% of the REEs and of the actinides. Among the elements we have analyzed, those displaying the strongest lithophile behaviors are Rb, Ba, Sr and Sc.
The homogeneity of the Δ17O values obtained for main-group aubrite falls [Δ17O = +0.009 ± 0.010‰ (2σ)] suggests that they originated from a single parent body whose differentiation involved an early phase of large-scale melting that may have led to the development of a magma ocean. This interpretation is at first glance in agreement with the limited variability of the shapes of the REE patterns of these aubrites. However, the trace element concentrations of their phases cannot be used to discuss this hypothesis, because their igneous trace-element signatures have been modified by subsolidus exchange. Finally, despite similar O isotopic compositions, the marked light-REE enrichments displayed by Mount Egerton and Larned suggest that they are unrelated to the main-group aubrites and probably originated from a distinct parent body
Hamburg: A Pristine H4 Chondrite Fall
Here we present the initial results from a consortium study that was formed to thoroughly characterize the meteorite Hamburg, an H4 OC that fell in January 2018
The fall, recovery, classification, and initial characterization of the Hamburg, Michigan H4 chondrite.
The Hamburg meteorite fell on January 16, 2018, near Hamburg, Michigan, after a fireball event widely observed in the U.S. Midwest and in Ontario, Canada. Several fragments fell onto frozen surfaces of lakes and, thanks to weather radar data, were recovered days after the fall. The studied rock fragments show no or little signs of terrestrial weathering. Here, we present the initial results from an international consortium study to describe the fall, characterize the meteorite, and probe the collision history of Hamburg. About 1 kg of recovered meteorites was initially reported. Petrology, mineral chemistry, trace element and organic chemistry, and O and Cr isotopic compositions are characteristic of H4 chondrites. Cosmic ray exposure ages based on cosmogenic He-3, Ne-21, and Ar-38 are similar to 12 Ma, and roughly agree with each other. Noble gas data as well as the cosmogenic Be-10 concentration point to a small 40-60 cm diameter meteoroid. An Ar-40-Ar-39 age of 4532 +/- 24 Ma indicates no major impact event occurring later in its evolutionary history, consistent with data of other H4 chondrites. Microanalyses of phosphates with LA-ICPMS give an average Pb-Pb age of 4549 +/- 36 Ma. This is in good agreement with the average SIMS Pb-Pb phosphate age of 4535.3 +/- 9.5 Ma and U-Pb Concordia age of 4535 +/- 10 Ma. The weighted average age of 4541.6 +/- 9.5 Ma reflects the metamorphic phosphate crystallization age after parent body formation in the early solar system