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A noble gas and cosmogenic radionuclide analysis of two ordinary chondrites from Almahata Sitta.

Authors :
MEIER, Matthias M. M.
WELTEN, Kees C.
CAFFEE, Marc W.
FRIEDRICH, Jon M.
JENNISKENS, Peter
NISHIIZUMI, Kunihiko
SHADDAD, Muawia H.
WIELER, Rainer
Source :
Meteoritics & Planetary Science; Jun2012, Vol. 47 Issue 6, p1075-1086, 0p
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

- We present the results of a noble gas (He, Ne, Ar) and cosmogenic radionuclide (<superscript>10</superscript>Be, <superscript>26</superscript>Al, <superscript>36</superscript>Cl) analysis of two chondritic fragments (#A100, L4 and #25, H5) found in the Almahata Sitta strewn field in Sudan. We confirm their earlier attribution to the same fall as the ureilites dominating the strewn field, based on the following findings: (1) both chondrite samples indicate a preatmospheric radius of approximately 300 g cm<superscript>−2</superscript>, consistent with the preatmospheric size of asteroid 2008 TC<subscript>3</subscript> that produced the Almahata Sitta strewn field; (2) both have, within error, a <superscript>21</superscript>Ne/<superscript>26</superscript>Al-based cosmic ray exposure age of approximately 20 Ma, identical to the reported ages of Almahata Sitta ureilites; (3) both exhibit hints of ureilitic Ar in the trapped component. We discuss a possible earlier irradiation phase for the two fragments of approximately 10-20 Ma, visible only in cosmogenic <superscript>38</superscript>Ar. We also discuss the approximately 3.8 Ga (<superscript>4</superscript>He) and approximately 4.6 Ga (<superscript>40</superscript>Ar) gas retention ages, measured in both chondritic fragments. These imply that the two chondrite fragments were incorporated into the ureilite host early in solar system evolution, and that the parent asteroid from which 2008 TC<subscript>3</subscript> is derived has not experienced a large break-up event in the last 3.8 Ga. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10869379
Volume :
47
Issue :
6
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Meteoritics & Planetary Science
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
77602412
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1945-5100.2012.01379.x