TY - JOUR
T1 - Siderophile elements in brecciated HED meteorites and the nature of projectile materials in HED meteorites
AU - Shirai, N.
AU - Okamoto, C.
AU - Yamaguchi, A.
AU - Ebihara, M.
N1 - Funding Information:
We thank MWG for providing us with the meteorite samples, Masahito Arakawa, Hideyasu Kojima and Kevin Righter for discussion. We are grateful to Kevin Righter for improving English. PGA and INAA analyses were made possible by an inter-university cooperative program for the use of JAEA facilities, supported by the University of Tokyo . We thank Tsutomu Ohtsuki and Hideyuki Yuki of the Laboratory for Nuclear Science, Tohoku University for their assistance with IPAA analyses. Yasuji Oura is acknowledged for his help throughout this work. We would like to thank for V. Reddy and L.E. Nyquist for providing useful and constructive comments on the manuscript. Financial support was provided in part via JSPS KAKENHI Grant Number 15340193 (M.E.), and 16740297 (A.Y.) and by NIPR , Research Project Funds, P-8 and KP-6 .
Publisher Copyright:
© 2016 Elsevier B.V.
PY - 2016/3/1
Y1 - 2016/3/1
N2 - Petrological, mineralogical and geochemical studies were performed on five brecciated HED meteorites (ALH 76005, EET 92003, LEW 85300, LEW 87026 and GRO 95633) in order to elucidate the nature of impactors on the HED parent body. Some brecciated HED meteorites contain exotic materials such as FeNi-metal grains with low Co/Ni ratios (ALH 76005, EET 92003 and GRO 95633) and carbonaceous chondrite clasts (LEW 85300) in a clastic and/or impact melt matrix. Such exotic materials were incorporated during brecciation. Platinum group element (PGE) abundances vary significantly (CI × 0.002-0.05), but are higher than those of pristine rocks from the HED parent body. The PGE ratios for the five HED meteorites are inconsistent with each other, implying that the impactor components of each HED meteorites are different from each other. The various PGE ratios are consistent with those for metals from chondrites and iron meteorites, and carbonaceous chondrites. This study provides the evidence that IAB and IVA iron meteorites, and carbonaceous chondrites (CM, CO, CV, CK, CB and CR), ordinary chondrites (L and H) and enstatite chondrite (EL) are candidates of the impactor materials on the HED parent body. It is highly probable that significant amounts of siderophile elements were incorporated into the inner solar system objects like the HED parent body from both chondritic materials and differentiated materials like iron meteorites during heavy bombardment. The HED meteorites in this study and metals from mesosiderite have different Pd/Ir ratios, probably implying that HED meteorites and mesosiderites formed either at distinct settings on one common parent body or on similar parent bodies.
AB - Petrological, mineralogical and geochemical studies were performed on five brecciated HED meteorites (ALH 76005, EET 92003, LEW 85300, LEW 87026 and GRO 95633) in order to elucidate the nature of impactors on the HED parent body. Some brecciated HED meteorites contain exotic materials such as FeNi-metal grains with low Co/Ni ratios (ALH 76005, EET 92003 and GRO 95633) and carbonaceous chondrite clasts (LEW 85300) in a clastic and/or impact melt matrix. Such exotic materials were incorporated during brecciation. Platinum group element (PGE) abundances vary significantly (CI × 0.002-0.05), but are higher than those of pristine rocks from the HED parent body. The PGE ratios for the five HED meteorites are inconsistent with each other, implying that the impactor components of each HED meteorites are different from each other. The various PGE ratios are consistent with those for metals from chondrites and iron meteorites, and carbonaceous chondrites. This study provides the evidence that IAB and IVA iron meteorites, and carbonaceous chondrites (CM, CO, CV, CK, CB and CR), ordinary chondrites (L and H) and enstatite chondrite (EL) are candidates of the impactor materials on the HED parent body. It is highly probable that significant amounts of siderophile elements were incorporated into the inner solar system objects like the HED parent body from both chondritic materials and differentiated materials like iron meteorites during heavy bombardment. The HED meteorites in this study and metals from mesosiderite have different Pd/Ir ratios, probably implying that HED meteorites and mesosiderites formed either at distinct settings on one common parent body or on similar parent bodies.
KW - Heavy bombardment
KW - Impact processes
KW - Platinum group elements
KW - Vesta
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U2 - 10.1016/j.epsl.2015.12.024
DO - 10.1016/j.epsl.2015.12.024
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84960887123
SN - 0012-821X
VL - 437
SP - 57
EP - 65
JO - Earth and Planetary Science Letters
JF - Earth and Planetary Science Letters
ER -