1William S. Cassata
Earth and Planetary Science Letters 660, 119307 Link to Article [https://doi.org/10.1016/j.epsl.2025.119307]
1Berkeley Geochronology Center, 2455 Ridge Road, Berkeley, CA 94709, USA
Copyright Elsevier
The origins of Earth’s volatiles, including water, remain uncertain. Noble gases can be used to constrain volatile sources as they exhibit significant chemical and isotopic variations amongst Solar System materials that Earth may have accreted. Here, I refine the isotopic composition of cometary xenon (Xe) measured during the Rosetta mission by optimizing its fit to isotopically similar presolar grains in meteorites. Using this composition, I show that Earth’s atmosphere can be explained as a mixture of 83.6 ± 3.2% meteoritic, 15.3 ± 2.8% cometary, and 1.1 ± 0.7% fission Xe (1σ; percentages are with respect to 132Xe). This same approach applied to Kr indicates Earth’s atmosphere is 72.1 ± 9.5% meteoritic and 27.9 ± 9.5% cometary Kr (1σ; percentages are with respect to 84Kr). Carbonaceous chondrites are likely the predominant source of meteoritic Xe. A carbonaceous chondrite accretion mass of 1.8– 5.2 wt.-% of Earth at the 95% confidence interval explains the relative abundances of meteoritic and fission Xe in Earth’s atmosphere. Such accretion may have delivered up to 6 – 18 oceans of water to Earth. Conversely, a cometary ice accretion mass of less than 5 × 10–5 wt.-% of Earth explains the relative abundance of cometary Xe. This would have delivered less than 0.2% of Earth’s water. The data further imply a more linear temporal variation in the mass dependent fractionation of atmospheric Xe throughout the first two billion years of Earth history than previously thought.
Submicron-scale craters on Chang’e-5 lunar soils: records of complex space weathering processes
1,2Lixin Gu, 1,3Yangting Lin, 4Yongjin Chen, 5Yuchen Xu,1,2Xu Tang, 1,3Jinhua Li
Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (in Press) Open Access Link to Article [https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gca.2025.04.004]
1Key Laboratory of Earth and Planetary Physics, Institute of Geology and Geophysics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100029, China
2Institutional Center for Shared Technologies and Facilities, Institute of Geology and Geophysics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100029, China
3College of Earth and Planetary Sciences, University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100049, China
4Center for High Pressure Science and Technology Advanced Research, Beijing 100094, China
5State Key Laboratory of Space Weather, National Space Science Center, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100190, China
Copyright Elsevier
Hyper-velocity impacts are dominant agents in the physical and chemical alteration of lunar surface materials. Natural small-scale craters on lunar soils provide an opportunity to understand the impact process and specific space weathering effects on minerals, however, they have not been systematically studied. Here, we report the morphology and microstructure of submicron-scale craters on Chang’e-5 lunar soils. Craters are found only on a few soil grains. Most identified craters exhibit large diameter-to-depth (D/d) ratios (>3) or are spatially clustered, indicating that they are formed by secondary ejecta rather than primary micrometeoroid impacts. Advanced electron microscopy investigations revealed that the microstructures of these craters are complex. Craters on the surfaces of two pyroxenes and one olivine have continuous nanophase iron (npFe0)-bearing rims that extend over the crater and beyond over the crystal substrate, even when covered by an impact-produced redeposition layer. These features provide reliable evidence of solar wind exposure prior to the impact events that formed the craters. The possibility cannot be ruled out that the npFe0 particles present in these craters were previously produced by solar wind irradiation and not by impact. However, no clear signs are observed to establish the chronological order of formation of npFe0 particles in other craters studied. Furthermore, a crater on ilmenite has a minimum D/d value of 2.6, suggesting that this crater is likely formed by a primary micrometeoroid impact. Some unusual euhedral and elongated npFe0 particles observed on the crater floor may also have been produced earlier by solar wind irradiation and retained in the crater during subsequent impact. Shock melting and vapor deposition may also contribute to npFe0 formation by reduction during impact. Our findings imply that secondary impacts can also have a high velocity (1–2.38 km/s lunar escape velocity) and play a more crucial role in the microstructural and chemical changes of lunar soils than previously recognized. Moreover, the formation of npFe0 particles in submicron-scale craters may involve multiple processes, such as solar wind irradiation, shock melting, and vapor deposition, and their effects can be superimposed. These new formation processes of npFe0 particles are universal and fundamental to the evolution of materials on the Moon and other airless planetary bodies.
Hypotheses for the water and metal fluxes to the rippled Amapari Marker Band, Gale Crater, Mars
1E.S. Kite et al. (>10)
Earth and Planetary Science Letters 660, 119347 Open Access Link to Article [https://doi.org/10.1016/j.epsl.2025.119347]
1University of Chicago, Chicago, IL, USA
Copyright Elsevier
Early Mars was habitable, at least intermittently, but major questions remain about how much water flowed and for how long. The paleoclimate evolution of Mars is captured by the stratigraphic record in Gale crater (Milliken et al. 2010). Climbing through mostly aeolian deposits reflecting arid conditions within Gale crater, the Mars Science Laboratory Curiosity rover encountered wave-rippled lake sediments of the basin-spanning Amapari Marker Band (AMB) that have very high metal enrichments (Fe, Mn, Zn). What caused the association between relatively wet primary depositional environment, and metal enrichment? Tentative, but reasonable extrapolation of rover metal data across the AMB suggests an excess Fe mass of 0.2 Gt. Transporting this Fe likely required ∼10,000 km3 of water flow, much more than the volume of the lake, across >103 yr. Deposition of the Fe could be due to a redox or pH front within or just beneath the lake. One possible basin-scale synthesis involves a climate excursion consisting of initial cooling then subsequent warming: initial cooling permits wind scour in Gale basin and ice build-up on Gale’s rim, while subsequent melting fills the lake and mobilizes Fe. Alternatively, the data can be explained by water-table fluctuations. In either case, the metal enrichment likely contributed to the hardness of these rocks, aiding wave-ripple preservation.
Formation and composition of Earth’s Hadean protocrust
1Simon Turner,2Bernard Wood,3Tim Johnson,4Craig O’Neill,5Bernard Bourdon
Nature 640, 390–394 Link to Article [DOI https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-025-08719-3]
1School of Natural Sciences, Macquarie University, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
2Department of Earth Sciences, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK
3School of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Curtin University, Perth, Western Australia, Australia
4School of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia
5Laboratoire de Géologie de Lyon Terre Planète Environnement, ENS Lyon, CNRS and Université Lyon I, Lyon, France
We currently do not have a copyright agreement with this publisher and cannot display the abstract here
Melting experiments of an L6 ordinary chondrite: Implications for the formation of alkali-rich achondrites
1,2S. Iannini Lelarge, 1,3M. Masotta, 1,3L. Folco, 4T. Ubide, 1,5M.D. Suttle, 6,7L. Pittarello
Geochemistry (Chemie der Erde)(in Press) Link to Article [https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chemer.2025.126293]
1Dipartimento di Scienze della Terra, Università di Pisa, Via Santa Maria 53, 56126 Pisa, Italy
2Institute of Geosciences and Earth Resources, Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche, Via Moruzzi 1, 56124 Pisa, Italy
3CISUP, Centro per l’Integrazione della Strumentazione Università di Pisa, Lungarno Pacinotti 43, Pisa 56126, Italy
4School of Earth and Environmental Sciences, The University of Queensland, Brisbane 4102, QLD, Australia
5School of Physical Sciences, The Open University, Walton Hall, Milton Keynes MK7 6AA, UK
6Naturhistorisches Museum, Mineralogisch-Petrographische Abteilung, Burgring 7, 1010 Vienna, Austria
7Department of Lithospheric Research, University of Vienna, Josef-Holaubek-Platz 2,1090 Vienna, Austria
Copyright Elsevier
We conducted high-pressure (1 GPa) melting experiments (1100–1400 °C) on the equilibrated ordinary chondrite DAV 01001 (L6) to investigate partial melting scenarios of planetary embryo in the early solar system. At 1100 °C, no melting of the silicate phase is observed, and the initial chondritic texture is preserved, but the metallic-sulphidic phases formed two immiscible Fesingle bondNi and S-rich liquids. Melting of silicate minerals began at 1200 °C, progressing from plagioclase to high-Ca and low-Ca pyroxene and olivine. As melting advanced, the formation of new olivine and low-Ca pyroxene resulted in the production of trachy-andesitic melt at 1200 °C, basaltic trachy-andesitic melt at 1300 °C, and andesitic melt at 1400 °C. These silicate melts have chemical similarities with some anomalous achondrites (e.g., GRA 60128/9). At the same time, minerals of new formation resemble those of primitive achondrites (e.g., brachinites, ureilites, IAB silicate inclusions, acapulcoites and lodranites). The rapid mineral-liquid re-equilibration suggests that basaltic liquids can form only above 1400 °C and that relatively high degrees of melting (>20 %) and crystallisation are necessary to explain the observed diversity of achondritic lithologies. These findings suggest that partial melting and recrystallization processes within planetary embryos could have played a critical role in the early solar system, contributing to the early differentiation of planetary bodies and the diversity of achondritic lithologies, including (but not limited to) alkali-rich achondrites.
Chemical, isotopic (O, He, U), and petrological characteristics of a slowly cooled enriched gabbroic shergottite, Northwest Africa 13134
1Lee Saper,1Yang Liu,2Michael A. Kipp,1David Burney,3Chi Ma,2Francois L. H. Tissot,4Edward Young,3Jonathan Treffkorn,3Kenneth A. Farley
Meteoritics & Planetary Science (in Press) Link to Article [https://doi.org/10.1111/maps.14345]
1Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, California, USA
2The Isotoparium, Division of Geological & Planetary Sciences, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, California, USA
3Division of Geological & Planetary Sciences, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, California, USA
4Earth, Planetary, and Space Sciences, University of California, Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California, USA
Published by arrangement with John Wiley & Sons
Northwest Africa 13134 is a coarse-grained gabbro with an oxygen isotopic composition consistent with a Martian origin and is classified as an enriched shergottite based on its bulk trace element abundances and bulk La/Yb ratio of 1.53. The meteorite is composed of a framework of large pyroxene rods up to 6 mm in longest dimension (64% by area) with interstitial maskelynite (formerly plagioclase; 28% by area). Minor phases include merrillite and apatite, Fe-Ti oxides, and Fe-sulfides; trace phases such as baddeleyite, tranquillityite, fayalitic olivine, silica, and a felspathic phase are observed in evolved mesostasis pockets and partially crystallized magmatic inclusions in minerals. Individual pyroxene rods display a distinctive patchy Ca zoning pattern of juxtaposed low-Ca (pigeonite) and high-Ca (augite) patches with a common crystallographic orientation indicating epitaxial growth. Low-Ca pigeonite is the volumetrically dominant pyroxene phase (~70% of exposed pyroxene) and was the primary liquidus phase, followed closely by augite. Plagioclase crystallized along with the other minor phases from the residual melt between cumulus pyroxene rods. Pyroxenes display ubiquitous exsolution lamellae with typical widths and spacings of 1–2 μm. Sulfide grains are characterized by flame-shaped lamellar intergrowths of hexagonal pyrrhotite (Fe0.90S) and slightly metal-deficient pyrrhotite (Fe0.98S), along with minor pentlandite and chalcopyrite. The pyroxene and sulfide microtextures suggest that the gabbro experienced slow and protracted subsolidus cooling. Ilmenite-oxide pairs imply an oxygen fugacity of ~1 log unit below the fayalite–magnetite–quartz buffer at a closure T ≈ 875°C. Collectively, the texture and bulk composition suggest that Northwest Africa 13134 represents a slowly cooled and coarsely crystalline portion of a solidified magma body similar to the source of the enriched basaltic shergottites. Magnetite occurs locally as veins crosscutting pyrrhotite grains and in oxide–phosphate symplectites observed at merrillite–apatite phase boundaries. The presence of magnetite in the sample suggests that at various stages of cooling, the gabbro interacted with relatively oxidized fluids, which could be of deuteric or exogeneous origin. A cosmic-ray exposure age of 2.8–4.0 Ma was calculated based on 3He measured in pyroxene grain separates and overlaps with other shergottites. Finally, we present the first bulk uranium isotope measurement of a Martian meteorite: δ238U = −0.22 ± 0.10‰ and δ234Usec = +9.57 ± 0.35‰. These values indicate slight excesses in heavy U but overlap with the distribution of U isotope compositions of the Earth and other solar system materials.
Effects of observation geometry and heating on the ultra-violet to near-infrared spectra of Mercury simulant
1Mireia Leon-Dasi, 2Sebastien Besse, 3Camille Cartier, 4Océane Barraud, 4Alessandro Maturilli, 1Alain Doressoundiram, 5Johannes Benkhoff, 3,6Laurie Llado
Icarus (in Press) Link to Article [https://doi.org/10.1016/j.icarus.2025.116582]
1LESIA, Observatoire de Paris, Université PSL, CNRS, 5 Place Jules Janssen, Meudon, 92195, France
2European Space Agency (ESA), European Space Astronomy Centre (ESAC), Camino Bajo del Castillo s/n, Villanueva de la Canada, 28692, Spain
3Centre de Recherches Pétrographiques et Géochimiques, Université de Lorraine, 15 Rue Notre Dame des Pauvres, Vandœuvre-lès-Nancy, 54501, France
4German Aerospace Center DLR, Institute of Planetary Research, Rutherfordstr. 2, Berlin, 12489, Germany
5European Space Agency (ESA), European Space Research and Technology Centre (ESTEC), Keplerlaan 1, Noordwijk, 2200 AG, The Netherlands
6Department of Geology, University of Liège, 4000 Sart Tilman, Belgium
Copyright Elsevier
The temperature of Mercury varies greatly across different latitudes due to the planet’s spin/orbit resonance, leading to modifications in the surface spectral properties. The upcoming BepiColombo mission will map the surface of the planet in the UV-TIR range, providing a more comprehensive understanding of the surface alteration. However, comparing the spectral measurements between BepiColombo and the past MESSENGER mission could be challenging due to the large differences in observation geometry. Laboratory experiments with close surface analogs in viewing conditions similar to the space-based observations are necessary to understand the effect of the space environment and interpret the orbital spectral measurements. This study presents the UV-NIR spectroscopy of a Mercury simulant to understand the impact of observation geometry and temperature on the spectral properties of the planet’s surface. The simulant (a mixture of aubrites, albite, and synthetic sulfides) and its endmembers are measured under six geometries that sample the viewing conditions of both missions. The samples are measured fresh and after heating to 450 °C during three cycles. This study finds that the observation geometry modifies the reflectance spectrum of the samples differently depending on the wavelength and composition. The analog presents a darkening, reddening, and flattening with increasing phase angle in the UV-NIR domain. The heated samples present a brightening and reddening, with a deepening of absorption bands. The spectral changes associated with observation geometry and heating are stronger with increasing Mg abundance.
Spheroidized plessite in Vaca Muerta: Formation mechanism and its implications for mesosiderites genesis and cooling history
1,2Laura Noel García,3Frederic Danoix,4Martina Ávalos,5Pouyan Shen,1María Eugenia Varela
Meteoritics & Planetary Science (in Press) Link to Article [https://doi.org/10.1111/maps.14352]
1Instituto de Ciencias Astronómicas, de la Tierra y del Espacio, Universidad Nacional de San Juan, CONICET, San Juan, Argentina
2Instituto de Mecánica Aplicada, Universidad Nacional de San Juan, San Juan, Argentina
3Groupe de Physique des Matériaux, UMR CNRS 6634, Saint Etienne du Rouvray, France
4Instituto de Física Rosario, Universidad Nacional de Rosario, CONICET, Rosario, Argentina
5Department of Materials and Optoelectronic Science, National Sun Yat-sen University, Kaohsiung, Taiwan, ROC
Published by arrangement with John Wiley & Sons
The presence of spheroidized plessite (SP) in mesosiderites was recently reported in the literature. This finding coupled with the poor understanding of this plessite variant, motivated us to investigate its formation process and evaluate its implications in assessing the previous proposals concerning mesosiderites’ genesis and cooling history. SP consists of spherulitic taenite particles irregularly distributed, usually surrounded by carbides, and embedded in a kamacite matrix. It has been reported in iron meteorites containing graphite, carbides, and pearlitic plessite (PP), especially in the IAB main group and the sLL and sLH subgroups. From the combination of X-ray tomography, electron backscatter diffraction, energy-dispersive spectrometry, and atom probe tomography in three samples of Vaca Muerta mesosiderite (A1, low to moderate metamorphism) from the ICATE (Argentina) collection of meteorites, we were able to identify a common crystallographic orientation between spheroids and retained taenite, the absence of PP and the carbon depletion in the metallic portion contiguous to the spheroids, and the high volumetric connectivity of the metallic portion. Based on these findings: (i) SP likely grew at the expense of pearlite lamellae, with their absence resulting from complete consumption after an extraordinarily slow cooling rate, probably succeeding a deep burial in a breccia of rock fragments. (ii) Carbon introduction would have followed plessite formation in mesosiderites at a temperature low enough to prevent carbon solid-state diffusion. (iii) Metal would have been poured in silicates, which favors the collision model between a differentiated asteroid and a molten core for mesosiderite genesis.
The source of hydrogen in earth’s building blocks
1Thomas J. Barrett, 1James F.J. Bryson, 2Kalotina Geraki
Icarus (in Press) Open Access Link to Article [https://doi.org/10.1016/j.icarus.2025.116588]
1Department of Earth Sciences, University of Oxford, Oxford OX1 3AN, UK
2Diamond Light Source, Harwell Science and Innovation Campus, Didcot OX11 0DE, UK
Copyright Elsevier
Despite being pivotal to the habitability of our planet, the process by which Earth gained its present-day hydrogen budget is unclear. Due to their isotopic similarity to terrestrial rocks across a range of elements, the meteorite group that is thought to best represent Earth’s building blocks is the enstatite chondrites (ECs). Because of ECs’ nominally anhydrous mineralogy, these building blocks have long been presumed to have supplied negligible hydrogen to the proto-Earth. However, recent bulk compositional measurements suggest that ECs may unexpectedly contain enough hydrogen to readily explain Earth’s present-day water abundance. Together, these contradictory findings mean the contribution of ECs to Earth’s hydrogen budget is currently unclear. As such, it is uncertain whether appreciable hydrogen is a systematic outcome of Earth’s formation. Here, we explore the amount of hydrogen in ECs as well as the phase that may carry this element using sulfur X-ray absorption near edge structure (S-XANES) spectroscopy. We find that hydrogen bonded to sulfur is prevalent throughout the meteorite, with fine matrix containing on average almost 10 times more Hsingle bondS than chondrule mesostasis. Moreover, the concentration of the Hsingle bondS bond is linked to the abundance of micrometre-scale pyrrhotite (Fe1-xS, 0 < x < 0.125). This sulfide can sacrificially catalyse a reaction with H2 from the disk at high temperatures to create H2S, which could be dissolved in adjoining molten silicate-rich material. Upon rapid cooling, this assemblage would form pyrrhotite encased in submicron silicate-rich glass that carries trapped H2S. These findings indicate that hydrogen is present in ECs in higher concentrations than previously considered and could suggest that this element may have a systematic, rather than stochastic, origin on our planet.
Volume measurement of microparticles using SEM photogrammetry and 3-D reconstruction
1,2Y. Zheng,1,2X. Yang,1M. Valdes,1,2,3A. M. Davis,1,2P. R. Heck
Meteoritics & Planetary Science (in Press) Open Access Link to Article [https://doi.org/10.1111/maps.14351]
1Robert A. Pritzker Center of Meteoritics and Polar Studies, Negaunee Integrative Research Center, Field Museum of Natural History, Chicago, Illinois, USA
2Department of the Geophysical Sciences, University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois, USA
3Enrico Fermi Institute, University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois, USA
Published by arrangement with John Wiley & Sons
In this paper, we introduce a method for volume measurement of microparticles that includes scanning electron microscope photogrammetry with 3-D model construction. Our results show that our method limits the volume uncertainty to ±10%, which is a significant improvement compared to previous methods (which likely overestimated volume by 100%–200%). We also discuss how the size, morphology, and porosity of the sample can affect the uncertainty of volume measurement. We find that our method can have a significant impact on cosmic ray exposure age determinations based on noble gas concentration, with implications for our understanding of cosmic ray irradiation of refractory minerals in the early solar system and presolar grains in the interstellar medium.