Magnesium and chromium isotope evidence for initial melting by radioactive decay of 26Al and late stage impact-melting

1Elishevah M.M.E. van Kooten, , 1Martin Schiller, 1Martin Bizzarro
Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (in Press) Link to Article [http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.gca.2017.03.033]
1Centre for Star and Planet Formation and Natural History Museum of Denmark, University of Copenhagen, DK-1350 Copenhagen, Denmark
Copyright Elsevier

Polymict ureilites are meteoritic breccias that provide insights into the differentiation history of the ureilite parent body.We have sampled a total of 24 clasts from the polymict ureilite Dar al Gani 319, representing a variety of lithologies such as mantle residues, cumulates and crustal fragments that are genetically related to monomict ureilites.In addition, we sampled four non-indigenous dark clasts and two chondrule-containing clasts from the same meteorite.We report on the petrology and the bulk mass-dependent and mass-independent magnesium and chromium isotope systematics of these clasts.The DaG 319 polymict ureilite consists predominantly of clasts related to Main Group ureilite residues (MG clasts) with varying Mg#s (0.74-0.91), as well as a significant fraction of olivine-orthopyroxene clasts related to Hughes Type ureilites (HT clasts) with consistently high Mg#s (∼∼0.89).In addition, DaG 319 contains less abundant feldspathic clasts that are thought to represent melts derived from the ureilite mantle.A significant mass-dependent Mg-isotope fractionation totaling ΔΔμμ2525Mg = ∼∼450 ppm was found between isotopically light feldspathic clasts (μμ2525Mg = –305±±25 to 15±±12 ppm), MG clasts (μμ2525Mg = –23±±51 ppm) and HT clasts (μμ2525Mg = 157±±21 ppm).We suggest that this isotopic offset is the result of equilibrium isotope fractionation during melting in the presence of an isotopically light magnesite component.We propose Mg-carbonates to be stable in the upper ureilite mantle, and pure carbon phases such as graphite to be stable at higher pressures.This is consistent with HT clasts lacking carbon-related phases, whereas MG clasts contain abundant carbon.The timing of differentiation events for the ureilitic clasts are constrained by high precision 5353Mn-5353Cr systematics and 2626Al-2626Mg model ages.We show that a dichotomy of ages exist between the differentiation of main group ureilite residues and HT cumulates rapidly after CAI formation and later remelting of cumulates with corresponding feldspathic melts, at 3.8±±1.3 Myr after CAI formation.Assuming an initial 2626Al/2727Al abundance[(2626Al/2727Al)0 = View the MathML source1.33-0.18+0.21×× 10−5] similar to the angrite parent body, the early melting event is best explained by heat production from 2626Al whereas the late event is more likely caused by a major impact. Variations in 5454Cr between MG clasts and HT clasts agree with a carbonaceous chondrite impactor onto the ureilite parent body. This impactor may be represented by abundant dark clasts found in polymict ureilites, which have μμ26Mg∗26Mg∗ and μμ5454Cr signatures similar to CI chondrites. Similar volatile-rich dark clasts found in other meteorite breccias provide insights into the timing of volatile influx to the accretion region of the terrestrial planets.

Effective radium-226 concentration in meteorites

1Frédéric Girault, 1Frédéric Perrier, 1Manuel Moreira, 2Brigitte Zanda, 3Pierre Rochette, 1,4Yoram Teitler
Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (in Press) Link to Article [http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.gca.2017.03.031]
1Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris, Sorbonne Paris Cité, University Paris Diderot, CNRS UMR 7154, F-75005 Paris, France
2Laboratoire de Minéralogie et de Cosmochimie du Muséum, Muséum National d’Histoire Naturelle, CNRS UMR 7202, F-75005 Paris, France
3Centre Européen de Recherche et d’Enseignement de Géosciences de l’Environnement, CNRS UMR 7330, Aix-Marseille University, BP80 F-13545 Aix en Provence Cedex 4, France
4Currently at: Centre de Recherches Pétrographiques et Géochimiques, Université de Nancy, CNRS UMR 7358, Vandœuvre-lès-Nancy, France
Copyright Elsevier

The analysis of noble gases in meteorites provides constraints on the early solar system and the pre-solar nebula. This requires a better characterization and understanding of the capture, production, and release of noble gases in meteorites. The knowledge of transfer properties of noble gases for each individual meteorite could benefit from using radon-222, radioactive daughter of radium-226. The radon-222 emanating power is commonly quantified by the effective radium-226 concentration (ECRa), the product of the bulk radium-226 concentration and of the emanation coefficient E, which represents the probability of one decaying radium-226 to inject one radon-222 into the free porous network. Owing to a non-destructive, high-sensitivity accumulation method based on long photomultiplier counting sessions, we are now able to measure ECRa of meteorite samples, which usually have mass smaller than 15 g and ECRa<0.5 Bq kg-1. We report here the results obtained from 41 different meteorites, based on 129 measurements on 70 samples using two variants of our method, showing satisfactory repeatability and a detection limit below 10-2 Bq kg-1 for a sample mass of 1 g. While two meteorites remain below detection level, we obtain for 39 meteorites heterogeneous ECRa values with mean (min–max range) of ca. 0.1 (0.018–1.30) Bq kg-1. Carbonaceous chondrites exhibit the largest ECRa values and eucrites the smallest. Such values are smaller than typical values from most terrestrial rocks, but comparable with those from Archean rocks (mean of ca. 0.18 Bq kg-1), an end-member of terrestrial rocks. Using uranium concentration from the literature, E is inferred from ECRa for all the meteorite samples. Values of E for meteorites (mean 40±4 %) are higher than E values for Archean rocks and reported values for lunar and Martian soils. Exceptionally large E values likely suggest that the 238U-226Ra pair would not be at equilibrium in most meteorites and that uranium and/or radium are most likely not uniformly distributed. ECRa of meteorites is correlated with E and seems to mainly reflect the gas permeability of the meteorite, which could be one important property, preserved in the meteorite, of its parent body, characterizing its history in space, possibly modified by alteration, shock metamorphism, and eventually weathering on Earth. Larger radon emanation values are associated with larger concentrations of the heaviest noble gases (argon, krypton, xenon), and larger 20Ne/22Ne and 36Ar/38Ar ratios, suggesting Earth’s atmosphere contamination or solar wind implantation, and probably a similar carrier phase such as Q phase. An unclear correlation is observed with 40Ar, which may rule out a purely radiogenic effect on radon emanation. Thus, larger radon emanation suggests a larger capacity of collecting solar and terrestrial gases, which should imply higher loss of gases generated in the meteorite and larger dispersion of Pb/U ratios for age determination. This study provides the first quantification of natural radon-222 loss from meteorites and opens promising perspectives to quantify the relationship between pore space connectivity and the transfer properties for noble gases in meteorites and other extraterrestrial bodies.

Bacterial survival following shock compression in the GigaPascal range

1,3Rachael Hazael, 2Brianna C. Fitzmaurice, 1,4Fabrizia Foglia, 2Gareth J. Appleby-Thomas, 1Paul F McMillan
Icarus (in Press) Link to Article [http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.icarus.2017.03.031]
1Christopher Ingold Laboratories, Department of Chemistry, University College London, London WC1H 0AJ, UK
2Cranfield Defense and Security, Cranfield University, Shrivenham, Swindon SN6 8LA, UK
3Department of Earth Sciences, University College London, London WC1E 6BT
4Department of Chemical Engineering, Imperial College London, London SW7 2AZ, UK
Copyright Elsevier

The possibility that life can exist within previously unconsidered habitats is causing us to expand our understanding of potential planetary biospheres. Significant populations of living organisms have been identified at depths extending up to several km below the Earth’s surface; whereas laboratory experiments have shown that microbial species can survive following exposure to GigaPascal (GPa) pressures. Understanding the degree to which simple organisms such as microbes survive such extreme pressurization under static compression conditions is being actively investigated. The survival of bacteria under dynamic shock compression is also of interest. Such studies are being partly driven to test the hypothesis of potential transport of biological organisms between planetary systems. Shock compression is also of interest for the potential modification and sterilization of foodstuffs and agricultural products. Here we report the survival of Shewanella oneidensis bacteria exposed to dynamic (shock) compression. The samples examined included: (a) a “wild type” (WT) strain and (b) a “pressure adapted” (PA) population obtained by culturing survivors from static compression experiments to 750 MPa. Following exposure to peak shock pressures of 1.5 and 2.5 GPa the proportion of survivors was established as the number of colony forming units (CFU) present after recovery to ambient conditions. The data were compared with previous results in which the same bacterial samples were exposed to static pressurization to the same pressures, for 15 minutes each. The results indicate that shock compression leads to survival of a significantly greater proportion of both WT and PA organisms. The significantly shorter duration of the pressure pulse during the shock experiments (2-3 μs) likely contributes to the increased survival of the microbial species. One reason for this can involve the crossover from deformable to rigid solid-like mechanical relaxational behavior that occurs for bacterial cell walls on the order of seconds in the time-dependent strain rate.

Sedimentary laminations in the Isheyevo (CH/CBb) carbonaceous chondrite formed by gentle impact-plume sweep-up

1,2Laurence A.J. Garvie, 2L. Paul Knauth, 2,3Melissa A. Morris
Icarus (in Press) Link to Article [http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.icarus.2017.03.021]
1Center for Meteorite Studies, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona 85287-6004, USA.
2School of Earth and Space Exploration, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona 85287-6004, USA.
3State University of New York, Cortland, NY 13045, USA
Copyright Elsevier

Prominent macroscopic sedimentary laminations, consisting of mm- to cm-thick alternating well-sorted but poorly mixed silicate-rich and metal-rich layers cut by faults and downward penetrating load structures, are prevalent in the Isheyevo (CH/CBb) carbonaceous chondrite. The load structures give the up direction of this sedimentary rock that accumulated from in-falling metal- and silicate-rich grains under near vacuum conditions onto the surface of an accreting planetesimal. The Isheyevo meteorite is the end result of a combination of events and processes that we suggest was initiated by the glancing blow impact of two planetesimals. The smaller impactor was disrupted forming an impact plume downrange of the impact. The components within the plume were aerodynamically size sorted by the nebular gas and swept up by the impacted planetesimal before turbulent mixing within the plume could blur the effects of the sorting. This plume would have contained a range of materials including elementally zoned Fe-Ni metal grains that condensed in the plume to disrupted unaltered material from the crust of the impactor, such as the hydrated matrix lumps. The juxtaposition of hydrated matrix lumps, some of which have not been heated above 150°C, together with components that formed above 1000°C, is compelling evidence that they were swept up together. Sweep-up would have occurred as the rotating impactor moved through the plume producing layers of material: the Isheyevo sample thus represents material accumulated while that part of the rotating planetesimal moved into the plume. Vibrations from subsequent impacts helped to form the load structures and induced weak grading within the layers via kinetic sieving. Following sweep-up, the particles were compacted under low static temperatures as evidenced by the preservation of elementally zoned Fe-Ni metal grains with preserved martensite α2 cores, distinct metal-metal grain boundaries, and metal-deformation microstructures. This meteorite provides evidence of gentle layer-by-layer accretion in the early Solar System, and also extends the terrestrial sedimentary source-to-sink paradigm to a near vacuum environment where neither fluvial nor aeolian processes operate.