1S. A. Singerling
Meteoritics & Planetary Science (in Press) Open Access Link to Article [https://doi.org/10.1111/maps.70177]
1Schwiete Cosmochemistry Laboratory, Goethe University, Frankfurt, Germany
Published by arrangement with John Wiley & Sons
This study documents micro- to nanoscale observations of primary nebular and secondary parent body iron sulfides in the CR1 GRO 95577. Despite the extensive alteration of the bulk sample, some primary sulfides managed to avoid alteration, having originally formed in the solar nebula during chondrule formation by either fission-sulfidization or crystallization. Secondary sulfides formed by precipitation from a fluid during aqueous alteration on the parent body and show features such as lath-like or euhedral morphologies, fine-scale intergrowths with serpentine, and porosity in pyrrhotite. Microstructures in pentlandite are most consistent with formation via impact-induced shock. Experiments have the potential to better constrain the effects of shock on pentlandite. Given pentlandite’s ubiquity in both minimally and heavily altered meteorites, it has the potential to be used as a shock indicator for samples otherwise ill-suited to shock determination (i.e., heavily aqueously altered materials).
Stardust Mine: A 2024 gabbroic shergottite from Arizona, USA
1,2Jennifer T. Mitchell,3,4Natasha R. Stephen,1Zsuzsanna P. Allerton,1Weiming Ding, Xin-Yuan Zhe
Meteoritics & Planetary Science (in Press) Open Access Link to Article [https://doi.org/10.1111/maps.70181]
1N.H. Winchell School of Earth & Environmental Sciences, University of Minnesota, 116 Church St SE, Minneapolis,Minnesota, 55455, USA
2Characterization Facility, University of Minnesota, 100 Union St, Minneapolis, Minnesota, 55455, USA
3The Geological Society of London, Burlington House, Picadilly, London, W1J 0BG, UK
4Department of Earth Science & Engineering, Imperial College London, Exhibition Road, London, SW7 2AZ, UK
Published by arrangement with John Wiley & Sons
This study provides an initial characterization of Stardust Mine, a fresh gabbroic enriched shergottite collected in Arizona, USA, in September 2024 and is the first Martian meteorite to be unequivocably collected on US soil. Analysis was conducted on the type specimen and finds that Stardust Mine is composed of equal proportions of pyroxene and maskelynite, with large Fe-Ti oxides and phosphates. Ti/Al ratios and two-pyroxene thermometry of the most primitive pyroxenes (Mg# >57), inferred to represent preplagioclase pyroxene crystallization, give an estimated minimum initial crystallization depth of ~40 km at ~1140°C. Sector zoning is restricted to these pyroxenes and may have developed through magmatic undercooling in response to magma ascent before storage in a staging chamber in the volcanic system. Pyroxene and plagioclase cocrystallized for almost the entirety of the crystallization sequence with evolving melt compositions, followed by phosphates and Fe-Ti oxides. Ilmenite-titanomagnetite pairs and D(Cr)pyroxene suggest the magma was relatively oxidized (fO2 ΔQFM −1.3) compared with other shergottites. Accumulation and crystal settling in a sill, dyke, or intracrustal magma chamber allowed the development of a shape-preferred orientation and decomposition of metastable pyroxenes to three-phase symplectites. Stardust Mine represents a highly fractionated lithology that extends the range of high-Al basaltic shergottites to ~8 wt% Al. Our analysis does not find a clear pairing with shergottites in literature in lieu of radiogenic isotope data, and Stardust Mine may therefore represent a previously unsampled lithology.
Visible, near-, and thermal infrared spectra of asteroid Bennu samples: Relationship to and implications for remote sensing of carbonaceous asteroids
1V. E. Hamilton et al. (>10)
Meteoritics & Planetary Science (in Press) Open Access Link to Article [https://doi.org/10.1111/maps.70176]
1Southwest Research Institute, Boulder, Colorado, USA
Published by arrangement with John Wiley & Sons
Remote spectroscopy is used to characterize the mineralogy and infer the history of planetary bodies. Carbonaceous asteroids, such as B-type (101955) Bennu, represent the earliest stages of planet formation. B types have a blue (negative) spectral slope and comprise <5% of asteroids. Samples from Bennu returned by the OSIRIS-REx spacecraft complement remote observations of this rare population. We show here, using laboratory spectra that are directly comparable to spacecraft data, that OSIRIS-REx accurately determined Bennu’s dust content and most of its surface composition. However, spectra of the asteroid exhibit stronger water absorptions than those of bulk samples, possibly due to hydrous, Mg-rich phosphate or solar wind implantation at Bennu’s uppermost surface. Bennu samples spectrally resemble the most aqueously altered carbonaceous meteorites and samples of (162173) Ryugu, indicating similarly pervasive aqueous alteration. However, one carbon-enriched Bennu stone does not appear to have a spectral analog among Ryugu samples or meteorites. Our findings demonstrate the leverage obtained using a wide range of wavelengths and that sample analysis anchors the interpretations of remote sensing, leading to more robust characterization of planetary surface composition and evolution.
A meteorite impact crater in the Eastern Goldfields of Western Australia—Shock metamorphism and projectile signature at the Ora Banda structure
1Raiza R. Quintero,2Aaron J. Cavosie,3Noreen J. Evans,3Bradley J. McDonald,4Sanna Alwmark,2Nicholas E. Timms,5Malcolm P. Roberts,6Jayson Meyers
Meteoritics & Planetary Science (in Press) Link to Article [https://doi.org/10.1111/maps.70154]
1Department of Geology, University of Puerto Rico at Mayaguez, Mayaguez, Puerto Rico
2Space Science and Technology Centre, School of Earth and Planetary Science, Curtin University, Perth, Western Australia,Australia
3John de Laeter Centre, Curtin University, Perth, Western Australia, Australia
4Department of Geology, Lund University, Lund, Sweden
5Centre for Microscopy, Characterisation and Analysis, The University of Western Australia, Crawley, Western Australia,Australia
6Resource Potentials LTD PTY, Osborne Park, Western Australia, Australia
Published by arrangement with John Wiley & Sons
The Ora Banda structure in Western Australia is situated within an Archean greenstone terrane known for orogenic gold deposits. It is defined by concentric gravity anomalies up to 4 km in diameter, and gravity and passive seismic data indicate the presence of a central uplift and annular trough. Shatter cones were found in surface samples and drill core during gold exploration. Breccia samples from drill core in the annular trough contain shocked quartz and glass with a projectile component. Planar deformation features (PDFs) were found in 17 quartz grains from suevite, and are oriented along crystallographic orientations typical for shock metamorphism, including and , recording shock pressures from 15 to 20 GPa. Analysis of glass in suevite by EMPA and LA-ICP-MS shows the composition is basaltic andesite (avg = 54 wt% SiO2), with major oxide compositions reflecting mixing of local Archean greenstone target rocks. Average abundances of Ni (2640 ppm), Co (205 ppm), Ir (290 ppb), and other PGEs (Rh, Pd, Pt) in the glass are significantly higher than mafic and ultramafic target rock lithologies and are interpreted to be meteoritic in origin, with Cr-Ir abundances indicating an iron projectile. Previous palynological analysis of crater fill sediments overlying the breccias indicates the impact event was likely Early Cretaceous or older. The Ora Banda structure offers insights into the cratering process near the simple-to-complex size transition, including the first documented occurrence of well-preserved “Ries-type” suevite described from Australia. In addition, Ora Banda represents one of the oldest known sites with strong geochemical evidence for an iron meteorite projectile and is one of few confirmed impact structures formed in an Archean greenstone terrane.
Presolar stardust in the ungrouped chondrite Chwichiya 002
1Lucas R. Smith,1,2Pierre Haenecour,1Jessica J. Barnes,1Kenneth Domanik,2Mason Neuman,2,3Kun Wang,2Piers Koefoed,1Elias Bloch,4Ryan Ogliore
Meteoritics & Planetary Science (in Press) Link to Article [https://doi.org/10.1111/maps.70166]
1Lunar and Planetary Laboratory, The University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona, USA
2Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, Missouri, USA
3McDonnell Center for the Space Sciences, Department of Physics, Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, Missouri,USA4 Department of Physics, University of Central Florida, Orlando, Florida, USA
Published by arrangement with John Wiley & Sons
We performed an in-depth study of the mineralogy, petrology, chemical composition, and presolar grain abundance of the C3.00-ungrouped chondrite Chwichiya 002 using a combination of in situ and bulk analytical methods. Chwichiya 002’s bulk composition is significantly enriched compared to CI chondrites (over 20 × CI for Sr, Ba, U) in rare earth and trace elements like Li, Sr, Ba, U, and Pb, indicating effects of terrestrial weathering. Concentrations of Ti and Al are similar to CI chondrites, but notably depleted relative to other carbonaceous chondrite groupings, suggesting that the parent body of Chwichiya 002 accreted from a source with a near CI composition of refractory elements, and with a low quantity of calcium–aluminum-rich inclusions. A slight reduction in Fe is linked to the predominance of FeO-poor chondrules and olivine, likely a remnant of Chwichiya 002’s formation history. Our findings uncovered phyllosilicates in the matrix and combinations of tochilinite–cronstedtite, confirming that Chwichiya 002 underwent more extensive alteration on its parent body than previously believed. We identified 12 O-anomalous presolar grains (8 Group 1, 4 Group 4) and nine presolar SiC grains, with abundances of 12.1 + 4.6/−3.5 ppm for O-rich grains and 7.8 + 3.6/−2.6 ppm for SiC grains. The relatively low occurrence of O-rich presolar grains is similar to what is seen in CM2 chondrites and samples from asteroid 162173 Ryugu, despite Chwichiya 002 being classified as type 3.00 petrologically. We conclude that Chwichiya 002 formed from a refractory-poor source similar to CM and CO chondrites, primarily consisting of FeO-poor chondrules and olivine, and underwent a moderate level of aqueous alteration on its parent body. Furthermore, the mineralogy, petrology, and compositional data reported in this study, combined with previous data on the O-isotopes of Chwichiya 002, suggest that the sample may better be classified as a CM2.8 or CM 2.9 chondrite.
Thermal histories of El Médano 300 (EM 300) and Northwest Africa 8155 (NWA 8155): Implications for the diversity of IAB-ungrouped iron meteorites and their parent bodies
1L. Perez,1M. Roskosz,2F. Danoix,1L. Kern,1V. Megevand,1C. Brillatz,3B. Devouard,3J. Gattacceca,1M. Gounelle
Meteoritics & Planetary Science (in Press) Open Access Link to Article [https://doi.org/10.1111/maps.70172]
1IMPMC, Museum National d’Histoire Naturelle, Sorbonne Universite, Paris, France
2Groupe de Physique des Materiaux, CNRS UMR 6634, Universite de Rouen, Saint Etienne du Rouvray, France
3Aix-Marseille Universit´e, CNRS, INRA, IRD, Coll France, CEREGE UM34, Aix en Provence, France
Published by arrangement with John Wiley & Sons
This study provides the first petrographic, crystallographic, and chemical comparison between El Médano 300 (EM 300) and Northwest Africa 8155 (NWA 8155), two particular IAB-ungrouped iron meteorites. Both contain exceptionally large graphite nodules and “flowers”, providing unique insights into carbon behavior in metallic melts and cooling conditions. Despite these similarities, they differ in their petrography, crystallography, and chemical composition. Whereas EM 300 exhibits a homogeneous metallic phase with rounded kamacite grains, originating from at least two taenite crystals, NWA 8155 displays a heterogeneous composition with elongated kamacite crystals, from a unique taenite crystal, along with martensite and residual taenite. Variations in nickel and highly siderophile elements contents point to different degrees of partial melting, indicating in turn formations within two different metallic pools, most probably on separate parent bodies. Troilite textures in EM 300 (spidery), compared to NWA 8155 (bulky), suggest an impact-related origin. Abundant small schreibersite grains in EM 300 indicate faster post-impact cooling. Finally, the absence of silicates in both meteorites suggests efficient metal-silicate segregation or formation within metallic parent bodies. These results provide new insights into the diversity of thermal and collisional histories among IAB-ungrouped iron meteorites, supporting the idea that each one may represent a single parent body and therefore reflecting the diversity of early planetesimal natures and evolutions.
Reassessing the organic carbon budget in the Murchison meteorite through an extraction–recovery mass-balance approach
1Hina Dohi,1Minako Hashiguchi,1Koichi Mimura
Meteoritics & Planetary Science (in Press) Open Access Link to Article [https://doi.org/10.1111/maps.70173]
1Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Graduate School of Environmental Studies, Nagoya University, Nagoya, Japan
Published by arrangement with John Wiley & Sons
A substantial fraction of organic carbon in carbonaceous chondrites has long been described as “missing,” reflecting incomplete recovery and limited resolution of operationally defined organic components. Here, we present a quantitative reassessment of the carbon budget in the Murchison meteorite using an integrated extraction–recovery mass-balance approach that constrains the distribution of carbon among operational fractions. Insoluble organic matter accounts for 69% ± 1.4% of total carbon, while acid-hydrolyzable organic matter (AOM) constitutes 15% ± 2.9%, representing a carbon pool comparable to soluble organic matter (SOM, 14% ± 2.7%). Carbonate-derived carbon accounts for 2% ± 2.0% of the total carbon inventory. The total recovered organic carbon reaches 88% ± 1.4% of bulk carbon. Carbon previously regarded as “missing” can be quantitatively reassigned to specific organic fractions, including uncollected AOM (7%) and SOM (2%), substantially reducing the previously unconstrained carbon fraction. Replicate analyses of three independently processed subsamples yield consistent residue-based carbon partitioning, supporting the robustness of the mass-balance framework. These results indicate that much of the missing carbon reflects incomplete recovery in analytical workflows rather than an unidentified reservoir, refining the organic carbon inventory of Murchison and providing a framework for reassessing carbon partitioning in primitive planetary materials.
The effects of shock process and terrestrial weathering on mercury isotopes in meteorites
1,2,3Yan Fan,1,4Deze Liu,1,5Shijie Li,6Xiangdong Li,3Shen Liu,1Dehan Shen,7Qing-Zhu Yin
Meteoritics & Planetary Science (in Press) Link to Article [https://doi.org/10.1111/maps.70175]
1Center for Lunar and Planetary Sciences, Institute of Geochemistry, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Guiyang, China
2Xi’an Center, China Geological Survey, Xi’an, China
3State Key Laboratory of Continental Dynamics and Department of Geology, Northwest University, Xi’an, China
4Department of Earth Sciences, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK
5Chinese Academy of Sciences, Center for Excellence in Comparative Planetology, Hefei, China
6Environmental Engineering Unit, Department of Civil and Structural Engineering, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University,Kowloon, Hong Kong
7Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, University of California at Davis, Davis, California, USA
Published by arrangement with John Wiley & Sons
This study assesses mercury (Hg) concentrations and their isotopic compositions in Antarctic chondrites, desert chondrites, and drilled samples from the Jilin chondrite (H5). Desert chondrites show mercury concentrations between 2.2 ng g−1 and 156.8 ng g−1, with δ202Hg ranging from −3.69‰ to 1.19‰. Δ199Hg and Δ201Hg vary from −0.23‰ to −0.02‰ and −0.2‰ to 0.02‰, respectively, showing a weak positive correlation among these parameters (slope 0.74 ± 0.24, R2 = 0.46). These Hg concentrations and isotopic composition data of desert chondrites indicate that Hg in desert chondrites has been altered due to terrestrial processes in addition to evaporation loss during its terrestrial residence period. Antarctic chondrites exhibit mercury concentrations from 8.0 ng g−1 to 3940.8 ng g−1, with δ202Hg from −2.51‰ to 1.16‰. Δ199Hg and Δ201Hg range from −0.83‰ to −0.05‰ and −0.71‰ to 0.10‰, with a significant correlation (slope 0.93 ± 0.15, R2 = 0.76), likely influenced by Antarctic snow that has experienced significant photochemical processes during atmospheric mercury depletion events (AMDEs) and has elevated mercury content (such as drifted snow). Jilin meteorite’s δ202Hg, Δ199Hg, and Δ201Hg vary between −3.74‰ to −1.79‰, −0.12‰ to 0.09‰, and −0.12‰ to −0.01‰, respectively. A weak positive correlation between Δ199Hg and Δ201Hg (slope 1.45 ± 0.28, R2 = 0.67) suggests localized Hg evaporation due to shock processes on the parent body; however, Hg isotopic heterogeneity from nebular or parent body processes cannot be excluded. Terrestrial weathering and shock events could alter Hg content and isotopic compositions in chondrites, challenging their use as accurate indicators of Hg’s cosmochemical behavior.
Low temperatures and high water/rock ratios in asteroid (101955) Bennu’s history based on X-ray powder diffraction of returned samples
1A. J. King,1P. F. Schofield,1J. Najorka,1H. C. Bates,1S. S. Russell,2T. J. McCoy,3T. J. Zega,3,4,5H. C. Connolly Jr,3D. S. Lauretta
Meteoritics & Planetary Science (in Press) Open Access Link to Article [https://doi.org/10.1111/maps.70169]
1Planetary Materials Group, Natural History Museum, London, UK
2National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC, USA
3Lunar and Planetary Laboratory, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona, USA
4Department of Geology, Rowan University, Glassboro, New Jersey, USA
5Department of Earth and Planetary Science, American Museum of Natural History, New York City, New York, USA
Published by arranegment with John Wiley & Sons
Samples returned by NASA’s OSIRIS-REx mission from the carbonaceous asteroid (101955) Bennu hold clues about conditions in the early solar system and the formation of planetary bodies. Initial investigation of Bennu samples found that they are rich in phyllosilicates and other secondary minerals formed during aqueous alteration of a larger parent body. To better understand the phyllosilicate minerals and constrain the extent and settings of alteration, we used X-ray powder diffraction (XRD) to characterize the mineralogy of homogenized aggregate (unsorted) samples and an angular particle from Bennu. We find that these samples consist of abundant (>80 vol%) phyllosilicates and few (≤2 vol%) precursor anhydrous silicates, in excellent agreement with remote observations of the global asteroid surface, and consistent with extensive aqueous alteration of Bennu’s parent body. The XRD patterns and modal mineralogy of the Bennu samples are similar to those of CI carbonaceous chondrites and particles returned from the carbonaceous asteroid (162173) Ryugu by JAXA’s Hayabusa2 mission, offering further support for the close genetic relationship among these materials suggested by other studies. Bennu’s phyllosilicates are dominated by a mixture of trioctahedral Mg-rich clay minerals that formed from alkaline fluids under high water to rock ratios and likely evolved in response to changes in temperature and/or fluid chemistry as alteration progressed. Based on the XRD characteristics of the phyllosilicates, the Bennu samples did not experience a peak temperature at or above ~300°C after aqueous alteration. Finally, we show that the interlayer space of the clay minerals potentially contains up to ~2 wt% water and does not host trapped organic species. The abundance of interlayer water in Bennu samples is notably higher than reported for Ryugu samples (<0.3 wt%), which we speculate is due to differences in either the timing at which the asteroids decoupled from the Main Belt or the sampling depths and/or mechanisms of the respective spacecraft.
Impact-diagnostic criteria for use in confirming a meteorite impact origin of terrestrial geological structures: Recommendations by the Impact Cratering Committee of the Meteoritical Society
1A. J. Cavosie et al.(>10)
Meteoritics & Planetary Science (in Press) Open Access Link to Article [https://doi.org/10.1111/maps.70163]
1Space Science and Technology Centre, School of Earth and Planetary Science, Curtin University, Perth, Western Australia, Australia
Publishesd by arrangement with John Wiley & Sons
The framework of the Impact Cratering Committee (ICC) of the Meteoritical Society was approved in 2020, with the first committee members appointed in 2023. The ICC has a mandate to (1) approve, maintain, and update a database of confirmed terrestrial meteorite impact structures, (2) define and regularly update the criteria used for identification of impact structures and their related deposits, and (3) evaluate new candidate sites for inclusion in the ICC database. Prior to certifying a list of confirmed impact structures, the ICC has compiled a list of all impact-diagnostic criteria that are currently considered as representing irrefutable or “gold standard” evidence that can be used independently to confirm whether or not a terrestrial geological structure has an impact origin. The ICC currently recognizes three categories of “gold standard” impact-diagnostic evidence: (1) Shock metamorphic features within rocks or minerals that on Earth have only been reported to occur in impactites, and whose formation conditions (high P–T) have been demonstrated through experiments to only form at conditions created during hypervelocity impacts; (2) meteorites that are spatially and chronologically associated with a site suspected of being an impact structure; and (3) geochemical elemental or isotopic detection of an extraterrestrial signature in melt rocks or breccias associated with a site suspected of being an impact structure. Other mineral and rock features have been reported from impact structures that are important to document, but they do not represent irrefutable or unambiguous evidence of impact. For this reason, we present two lists: The first list describes each impact-diagnostic criterion and provides recommendations for reporting protocols. The second list describes other features commonly reported from impact settings and the rationale for why these are not currently considered by the ICC to represent impact-diagnostic evidence. The ICC will provide a list of confirmed terrestrial impact structures in a subsequent publication and online. Updates to the list based on new discoveries and/or new understanding of impact-diagnostic criteria will be published online by the ICC.