Chondrite

Chondrites are stony meteorites that have not been modified due to melting or differentiation of the parent body. They formed when various types of dust and small grains that were present in the early solar system accreted to form primitive asteroids. Prominent among the components present in chondrites are the enigmatic chondrules, millimeter-sized objects that originated as freely floating, molten or partially molten droplets in space; most chondrules are rich in the silicate minerals olivine and pyroxene. Chondrites also contain refractory inclusions (including Ca-Al Inclusions), which are among the oldest objects to form in the solar system, particles rich in metallic Fe-Ni and sulfides, and isolated grains of silicate minerals. The remainder of chondrites consists of fine-grained (micrometer-sized or smaller) dust, which may either be present as the matrix of the rock or may form rims or mantles around individual chondrules and refractory inclusions. Embedded in this dust are presolar grains, which predate the formation of our solar system and originated elsewhere in the galaxy.

Most meteorites that are recovered on Earth are chondrites: 86.2% of witnessed falls are chondrites,[1] as are the overwhelming majority of meteorites that are found. There are currently over 27,000 chondrites in the world's collections. The largest individual stone ever recovered, weighing 1770 kg, was part of the Jilin meteorite shower of 1976. Chondrite falls range from single stones to extraordinary showers consisting of thousands of individual stones, as occurred in the Holbrook fall of 1912, where an estimated 14,000 stones rained down on northern Arizona.

Contents

Origin and history

The parent bodies of chondrites are (or were) small to medium sized asteroids that were never part of any body large enough to undergo melting and planetary differentiation. These bodies accreted shortly after the beginning of the Solar System's history, with 206Pb/204Pb age of 4566.6 ± 1.0 Ma[2] years ago and matching ages for other chronometers. Although chondritic asteroids never became hot enough to melt based upon internal textures, many of them reached high enough temperatures that they experienced significant thermal metamorphism in their interiors. The source of the heat was most likely energy coming from the decay of short-lived radioisotopes (half-lives less than a few million years) that were present in the newly formed solar system, especially 26Al and 60Fe, although heating may have been caused by impacts onto the asteroids as well. Many chondritic asteroids also contained significant amounts of water, possibly due to the accretion of ice along with rocky material. As a result, many chondrites contain hydrous minerals, such as clays, that formed when the water interacted with the rock on the asteroid in a process known as aqueous alteration. In addition, all chondritic asteroids were affected by impact and shock processes due to collisions with other asteroids. These events caused a variety of effects, ranging from simple compaction to brecciation, veining, localized melting, and formation of high-pressure minerals. The net result of these secondary thermal, aqueous, and shock processes is that only a few known chondrites preserve in pristine form the original dust, chondrules, and inclusions from which they formed.

Types of chondrites

Chondrites are divided into about 15 distinct groups (see Meteorites classification) on the basis of their mineralogy,[3] bulk chemical composition, and oxygen isotopic compositions[4] (see below). The various chondrite groups likely originated on separate asteroids or groups of related asteroids. Each chondrite group has a distinctive mixture of chondrules, refractory inclusions, matrix (dust), and other components and a characteristic grain size. Other ways of classifying chondrites include weathering[5] and shock.[6]

Ordinary chondrites

Ordinary chondrites are by far the most common type of meteorite to fall on Earth: about 80% of all meteorites and over 90% of chondrites are ordinary chondrites. They contain abundant chondrules, sparse matrix (10-15% of the rock), few refractory inclusions, and variable amounts of Fe-Ni metal and troilite (FeS). Their chondrules are generally in the range of 0.5 to 1 mm in diameter. Ordinary chondrites are distinguished chemically by their depletions in refractory lithophile elements, such as Ca, Al, Ti, and rare earths, relative to Si, and isotopically by their unusually high 17O/16O ratios relative to 18O/16O compared to Earth rocks. Most, but not all, ordinary chondrites have experienced significant degrees of metamorphism, having reached temperatures well above 500 °C on the parent asteroids. They are divided into three groups, which have different amounts of metal and different amounts of total iron:

Carbonaceous chondrites

Carbonaceous chondrites make up less than 5% of the chondrites that fall on earth. There are many groups of carbonaceous chondrites, but most of them are distinguished chemically by enrichments in refractory lithophile elements relative to Si and isotopically by unusually low 17O/16O ratios relative to 18O/16O compared to Earth rocks. All groups of carbonaceous chondrites except the CH group are named for a characteristic type specimen:

Enstatite chondrites

Enstatite chondrites (also known as E-type chondrites) are a rare form of meteorite thought to comprise only about 2% of the chondrites that fall on Earth.[8] Only about 200 E-Type chondrites are currently known.[8]

E-type chondrites are among the most chemically reduced rocks known, with most of their iron taking the form of metal or sulfide rather than as an oxide. They tend to be high in the mineral enstatite (MgSiO3), from which they derive their name.[8]

Other chondrites

R (Rumuruti type) chondrites are a very rare group, with only one documented fall out of almost 900 documented chondrite falls. They have a number of properties in common with ordinary chondrites, including similar types of chondrules, few refractory inclusions, similar chemical composition for most elements, and the fact that 17O/16O ratios are anomalously high compared to Earth rocks. However, there are significant differences between R chondrites and ordinary chondrites: R chondrites have much more dusty matrix material (about 50% of the rock); they are much more oxidized, containing little metallic Fe-Ni; and their enrichments in 17O are higher than those of ordinary chondrites.

Three chondrites form what is known as the K (Kakangari type) grouplet, characterized by large amounts of dusty matrix and oxygen isotope compositions similar to carbonaceous chondrites, highly reduced mineral compositions and high metal abundances that are most like enstatite chondrites, and concentrations of refractory lithophile elements that are most like ordinary chondrites.

Composition

Because chondrites accumulated from material that formed very early in the history of the solar system, and because chondritic asteroids did not melt, they have very primitive compositions. "Primitive," in this sense, means that the abundances of most chemical elements do not differ greatly from those that are measured by spectroscopic methods in the photosphere of the sun, which in turn should be well-representative of the entire solar system (note: to make such a comparison between a gaseous object like the sun and a rock like a chondrite, scientists choose one rock-forming element, such as silicon, to use as a reference point, and then compare ratios. Thus, the atomic ratio of Mg/Si measured in the sun (1.07) is identical to that measured in CI chondrites [9]).

Although all chondrite compositions can be considered primitive, there is variation among the different groups, as discussed above. CI chondrites seem to be nearly identical in composition to the sun for all but the gas-forming elements (e.g., hydrogen, carbon, nitrogen, and noble gases). Other chondrite groups deviate from the solar composition (i.e., they are fractionated) in highly systematic ways:

Petrologic types

A chondrite's group is determined by its primary chemical, mineralogical, and isotopic characteristics (above). The degree to which it has been affected by the secondary processes of thermal metamorphism and aqueous alteration on the parent asteroid is indicated by its petrologic type, which appears as a number following the group name (e.g., an LL5 chondrite belongs to the LL group and has a petrologic type of 5). The current scheme for describing petrologic types was devised by Van Schmus and Wood in 1967.[3]

The petrologic-type scheme originated by Van Schmus and Wood is really two separate schemes, one describing aqueous alteration (types 1-2) and one describing thermal metamorphism (types 3-6). The aqueous alteration part of the system works as follows:

The thermal metamorphism part of the scheme describes a continuous sequence of changes to mineralogy and texture that accompany increasing metamorphic temperatures. These chondrites show little evidence of the effects of aqueous alteration:

Some workers have extended the Van Schmus and Wood metamorphic scheme to include a type 7, although there is not consensus on whether this is necessary. Type 7 chondrites have experienced the highest temperatures possible, short of that required to produce melting. Should the onset of melting occur the meteorite would probably be classified as a primitive achondrite instead of a chondrite.

All groups of ordinary and enstatite chondrites, as well as R and CK chondrites, show the complete metamorphic range from type 3 to 6. CO chondrites comprise only type 3 members, although these span a range of petrologic types from 3.0 to 3.8.

See also

References

  1. ^ Bischoff, A.; Geiger, T. (1995). "Meteorites for the Sahara: Find locations, shock classification, degree of weathering and pairing". Meteoritics 30 (1): 113–122. Bibcode 1995Metic..30..113B. ISSN 0026-1114. 
  2. ^ Amelin, Yuri; Krot, Alexander (2007). "Pb isotopic age of the Allende chondrules". Meteoritics & Planetary Science 42 (7/8): 1043–1463. Bibcode 2007M&PS...42.1043F. doi:10.1111/j.1945-5100.2007.tb00559.x. http://digitalcommons.library.arizona.edu/holdings/journal/article?r=uadc%3A%2F%2Fazu_maps%2FVolume42%2FNumber7-8%2Fp1321-1335. Retrieved 2009-07-13. 
  3. ^ a b Van Schmus, W. R.; Wood, J. A. (1967). "A chemical-petrologic classification for the chondritic meteorites". Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 31 (5): 747–765. Bibcode 1967GeCoA..31..747V. doi:10.1016/S0016-7037(67)80030-9. 
  4. ^ Clayton, R. N.; Mayeda, T. K. (1989), "Oxygen Isotope Classification of Carbonaceous Chondrites", Abstracts of the Lunar and Planetary Science Conference 20: 169, Bibcode 1989LPI....20..169C 
  5. ^ Wlotzka, F. (Jul 1993), "A Weathering Scale for the Ordinary Chondrites", Meteoritics 28: 460, Bibcode 1993Metic..28Q.460W 
  6. ^ Stöffler, Dieter; Keil, Klaus; Edward R.D, Scott (Dec 1991). "Shock metamorphism of ordinary chondrites". Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 55 (12): 3845–3867. Bibcode 1991GeCoA..55.3845S. doi:10.1016/0016-7037(91)90078-J. 
  7. ^ http://meteorites.wustl.edu/id/metal.htm
  8. ^ a b c Norton, O.R. and Chitwood, L.A. Field Guide to Meteors and Meteorites, Springer-Verlag, London 2008
  9. ^ Grevesse and Sauval (2005) in Encyclopedia of Astronomy & Astrophysics, IOP Publishing, Ltd.

External links