TY - JOUR
T1 - Glass veins in the unequilibrated eucrite Yamato 82202
AU - Buchanan, Paul C.
AU - Noguchi, Takaaki
AU - Bogard, Donald D.
AU - Ebihara, Mitsuru
AU - Katayama, Ikuo
N1 - Funding Information:
This study was undertaken while PCB was a research fellow at the National Institute of Polar Research in Tokyo, Japan, funded by the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS). Technical support was provided by H. Kaiden, T. Tomiyama, and D. H. Garrison and is greatly appreciated. Analyses were supported by financial grants from JSPS (#01852 to K. Misawa, #13440158 to T. N., #15340193 to M. E.) and from NASA (to D. B.). Cooperation from the Antarctic Meteorite Research Committee and from the staff at Tokyo Institute of Technology is greatly appreciated. Helpful reviews were provided by Jean-Alix Barrat, Maria Eugenia Varela, and Carolyn van der Bogert. Editorial assistance by Christian Koeberl is appreciated.
PY - 2005/4/1
Y1 - 2005/4/1
N2 - The unequilibrated eucrite Yamato 82202 (Y82202) contains a network of relatively thick (up to 1 mm in width) glass veins. The host of the meteorite represents a monomict breccia composed of volcanic rock that crystallized > 4.3 Ga ago as a lava flow on the surface of 4 Vesta. The veins formed 3.90 ± 0.04 Ga ago, probably as a result of frictional melting associated with impact, under conditions of low effective oxygen fugacity and higher sulfur fugacity. The glass contains disordered structural elements characteristic of pyroxene and feldspar, reminiscent of the eucritic target lithology. The unequilibrated pyroxenes of the volcanic host and the pristine character of the glass indicate that this meteoritic material did not experience significant thermal metamorphism after initial crystallization of the lava. Hence, it was not affected by regional metamorphism caused by burial to a significant depth or by long-term contact metamorphism associated with a thick lava flow, large intrusion, or hot layer of impact ejecta. The meteorite resided at a shallow depth (though not at the surface) on 4 Vesta or on one of the vestoids until it was ejected and traveled to Earth, probably with other HED materials that have 36Ar exposure ages of ∼13 Ma. These data suggest that the surface of the asteroid 4 Vesta has significant, though probably small, proportions of glass, as well as unequilibrated volcanic rock.
AB - The unequilibrated eucrite Yamato 82202 (Y82202) contains a network of relatively thick (up to 1 mm in width) glass veins. The host of the meteorite represents a monomict breccia composed of volcanic rock that crystallized > 4.3 Ga ago as a lava flow on the surface of 4 Vesta. The veins formed 3.90 ± 0.04 Ga ago, probably as a result of frictional melting associated with impact, under conditions of low effective oxygen fugacity and higher sulfur fugacity. The glass contains disordered structural elements characteristic of pyroxene and feldspar, reminiscent of the eucritic target lithology. The unequilibrated pyroxenes of the volcanic host and the pristine character of the glass indicate that this meteoritic material did not experience significant thermal metamorphism after initial crystallization of the lava. Hence, it was not affected by regional metamorphism caused by burial to a significant depth or by long-term contact metamorphism associated with a thick lava flow, large intrusion, or hot layer of impact ejecta. The meteorite resided at a shallow depth (though not at the surface) on 4 Vesta or on one of the vestoids until it was ejected and traveled to Earth, probably with other HED materials that have 36Ar exposure ages of ∼13 Ma. These data suggest that the surface of the asteroid 4 Vesta has significant, though probably small, proportions of glass, as well as unequilibrated volcanic rock.
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U2 - 10.1016/j.gca.2004.08.022
DO - 10.1016/j.gca.2004.08.022
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:16244379538
SN - 0016-7037
VL - 69
SP - 1883
EP - 1898
JO - Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta
JF - Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta
IS - 7
ER -