The relationship of CH, CB, and CR chondrites: Constraints from trace elements and Fe-Ni isotope systematics in metal

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Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)291-309
Number of pages19
JournalGeochimica et cosmochimica acta
Volume308
Early online date15 Jun 2021
Publication statusPublished - 1 Sept 2021

Abstract

Due to similarities in chemical composition and common Cr, Ti, N and O isotope trends, the metal-rich CR, CH and CB chondrites, often referred to as CR clan chondrites, are thought to be related to each other. This study aims to shed light on this relationship by the investigation of Fe and Ni isotope and trace element compositions of metal grains from CR and CH chondrites, in order to compare the results with previously reported data from CB chondrite metal. In situ trace element and Fe and Ni isotope analyses were conducted by femtosecond-laser ablation-(multicollector-)inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry (fs-LA-(MC-)ICP-MS). Furthermore, bulk CB metal and silicate separates were analyzed by solution MC-ICP-MS. Chemical compositions of metal grains in metal-rich chondrites are depleted in moderately volatile siderophile elements relative to the solar values with the exception of Pd. Such element abundance patterns are consistent with models of incomplete condensation from a gas with solar composition. Both, zoned and unzoned metal grains from CH and CB chondrites display very similar Fe and Ni isotopes compositions, indicating they likely formed within the same event, during non-equilibrium fractional condensation from an impact-induced vapor plume. This scenario is also supported by non-equilibrium Fe isotope signatures between bulk CB metal and silicate. Zoned metal grains likely formed in the fast-cooling outer shell region of the plume and are dominated by kinetic fractionation, resulting in isotopically light cores, while unzoned metal grains condensed under nearly equilibrium conditions, likely in the slow-cooling interior of the plume. Variability in Fe and Ni isotope compositions among different unzoned grains may be explained by (1) a kinetic component during their condensation and/or (2) evaporation and condensation-driven reservoir effects in the plume, which resulted in light and heavy isotope signatures, respectively. Textural differences between CH and CBb are most pronounced in the mean grain size, which may be attributed to grain-size sorting. Such a process could also explain the lack of zoned metals in CBa chondrites, as zoned metal grains in CBb and CH chondrites are by more than a magnitude smaller than the mean metal grain size of CBa chondrites. In CR chondrites, metal within chondrules likely formed by fractional condensation from a solar type gas followed by subsequent melting leading to equilibration with chondrule silicates. Larger isolated metal grains from the matrix are less processed, and apparently escaped silicate equilibration. Those metal grains are indistinguishable from unzoned grains in CH and CB chondrites in trace elements and Fe and Ni isotopic compositions albeit with a slightly narrower compositional range. Based on these findings we conclude that metal precursors in CR chondrites are strongly related to unzoned metal in CH, and CB chondrites and possibly share a common origin. This metal component would be smallest in CR chondrites, larger in CH and dominant in CB chondrites which is also consistent with age constraints and isotopic anomalies observed in CR clan chondrites.

Keywords

    CB chondrites, CH chondrites, Condensation, CR chondrites, Fe and Ni isotopes, Impact plume, Zoned metal

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The relationship of CH, CB, and CR chondrites: Constraints from trace elements and Fe-Ni isotope systematics in metal. / Weyrauch, M.; Zipfel, J.; Weyer, S.
In: Geochimica et cosmochimica acta, Vol. 308, 01.09.2021, p. 291-309.

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title = "The relationship of CH, CB, and CR chondrites: Constraints from trace elements and Fe-Ni isotope systematics in metal",
abstract = "Due to similarities in chemical composition and common Cr, Ti, N and O isotope trends, the metal-rich CR, CH and CB chondrites, often referred to as CR clan chondrites, are thought to be related to each other. This study aims to shed light on this relationship by the investigation of Fe and Ni isotope and trace element compositions of metal grains from CR and CH chondrites, in order to compare the results with previously reported data from CB chondrite metal. In situ trace element and Fe and Ni isotope analyses were conducted by femtosecond-laser ablation-(multicollector-)inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry (fs-LA-(MC-)ICP-MS). Furthermore, bulk CB metal and silicate separates were analyzed by solution MC-ICP-MS. Chemical compositions of metal grains in metal-rich chondrites are depleted in moderately volatile siderophile elements relative to the solar values with the exception of Pd. Such element abundance patterns are consistent with models of incomplete condensation from a gas with solar composition. Both, zoned and unzoned metal grains from CH and CB chondrites display very similar Fe and Ni isotopes compositions, indicating they likely formed within the same event, during non-equilibrium fractional condensation from an impact-induced vapor plume. This scenario is also supported by non-equilibrium Fe isotope signatures between bulk CB metal and silicate. Zoned metal grains likely formed in the fast-cooling outer shell region of the plume and are dominated by kinetic fractionation, resulting in isotopically light cores, while unzoned metal grains condensed under nearly equilibrium conditions, likely in the slow-cooling interior of the plume. Variability in Fe and Ni isotope compositions among different unzoned grains may be explained by (1) a kinetic component during their condensation and/or (2) evaporation and condensation-driven reservoir effects in the plume, which resulted in light and heavy isotope signatures, respectively. Textural differences between CH and CBb are most pronounced in the mean grain size, which may be attributed to grain-size sorting. Such a process could also explain the lack of zoned metals in CBa chondrites, as zoned metal grains in CBb and CH chondrites are by more than a magnitude smaller than the mean metal grain size of CBa chondrites. In CR chondrites, metal within chondrules likely formed by fractional condensation from a solar type gas followed by subsequent melting leading to equilibration with chondrule silicates. Larger isolated metal grains from the matrix are less processed, and apparently escaped silicate equilibration. Those metal grains are indistinguishable from unzoned grains in CH and CB chondrites in trace elements and Fe and Ni isotopic compositions albeit with a slightly narrower compositional range. Based on these findings we conclude that metal precursors in CR chondrites are strongly related to unzoned metal in CH, and CB chondrites and possibly share a common origin. This metal component would be smallest in CR chondrites, larger in CH and dominant in CB chondrites which is also consistent with age constraints and isotopic anomalies observed in CR clan chondrites.",
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author = "M. Weyrauch and J. Zipfel and S. Weyer",
note = "Funding Information: We want to thank Julian Feige and Tina Emmel for sample preparation. Moreover, we thank Heidi H{\"o}fer and Markus Sch{\"o}lmerich for technical support at the electron microprobe in Frankfurt, and Chao Zhang for his support in Hannover. Additionally, we are grateful to Martin Oeser, Stephan Schuth and Ingo Horn for their technical support with LA-ICP-MS analyses. We thank the late Bernhard Spettel for support with the INAA. His experience was of invaluable help with data reduction. Mike Weisberg, an anonymous reviewer, and the handling editor Sasha Krot are thanked for their constructive reviews. Antarctic meteorite sample PAT 91546,13 was kindly provided from the Meteorite Working Group. US Antarctic meteorite samples are recovered by the Antarctic Search for Meteorites (ANSMET) program which has been funded by NSF and NASA, and characterized and curated by the Department of Mineral Sciences of the Smithsonian Institution and Astromaterials Curation Office at NASA Johnson Space Center. Samples of Northwest Africa 852 and Acfer 214 were provided by the Senckenberg Forschungsinstitut und Naturmuseum Frankfurt, Germany. Rainer Bartoschewitz must be thanked for providing us with sample material of SaU 290. This work was funded by the German Research Foundation (DFG) within the Priority Program “The first 10 Million Years – a Planetary Materials Approach” (SPP 1385, project WE 2850/13-1, ZI 1196/3-1).",
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Download

TY - JOUR

T1 - The relationship of CH, CB, and CR chondrites

T2 - Constraints from trace elements and Fe-Ni isotope systematics in metal

AU - Weyrauch, M.

AU - Zipfel, J.

AU - Weyer, S.

N1 - Funding Information: We want to thank Julian Feige and Tina Emmel for sample preparation. Moreover, we thank Heidi Höfer and Markus Schölmerich for technical support at the electron microprobe in Frankfurt, and Chao Zhang for his support in Hannover. Additionally, we are grateful to Martin Oeser, Stephan Schuth and Ingo Horn for their technical support with LA-ICP-MS analyses. We thank the late Bernhard Spettel for support with the INAA. His experience was of invaluable help with data reduction. Mike Weisberg, an anonymous reviewer, and the handling editor Sasha Krot are thanked for their constructive reviews. Antarctic meteorite sample PAT 91546,13 was kindly provided from the Meteorite Working Group. US Antarctic meteorite samples are recovered by the Antarctic Search for Meteorites (ANSMET) program which has been funded by NSF and NASA, and characterized and curated by the Department of Mineral Sciences of the Smithsonian Institution and Astromaterials Curation Office at NASA Johnson Space Center. Samples of Northwest Africa 852 and Acfer 214 were provided by the Senckenberg Forschungsinstitut und Naturmuseum Frankfurt, Germany. Rainer Bartoschewitz must be thanked for providing us with sample material of SaU 290. This work was funded by the German Research Foundation (DFG) within the Priority Program “The first 10 Million Years – a Planetary Materials Approach” (SPP 1385, project WE 2850/13-1, ZI 1196/3-1).

PY - 2021/9/1

Y1 - 2021/9/1

N2 - Due to similarities in chemical composition and common Cr, Ti, N and O isotope trends, the metal-rich CR, CH and CB chondrites, often referred to as CR clan chondrites, are thought to be related to each other. This study aims to shed light on this relationship by the investigation of Fe and Ni isotope and trace element compositions of metal grains from CR and CH chondrites, in order to compare the results with previously reported data from CB chondrite metal. In situ trace element and Fe and Ni isotope analyses were conducted by femtosecond-laser ablation-(multicollector-)inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry (fs-LA-(MC-)ICP-MS). Furthermore, bulk CB metal and silicate separates were analyzed by solution MC-ICP-MS. Chemical compositions of metal grains in metal-rich chondrites are depleted in moderately volatile siderophile elements relative to the solar values with the exception of Pd. Such element abundance patterns are consistent with models of incomplete condensation from a gas with solar composition. Both, zoned and unzoned metal grains from CH and CB chondrites display very similar Fe and Ni isotopes compositions, indicating they likely formed within the same event, during non-equilibrium fractional condensation from an impact-induced vapor plume. This scenario is also supported by non-equilibrium Fe isotope signatures between bulk CB metal and silicate. Zoned metal grains likely formed in the fast-cooling outer shell region of the plume and are dominated by kinetic fractionation, resulting in isotopically light cores, while unzoned metal grains condensed under nearly equilibrium conditions, likely in the slow-cooling interior of the plume. Variability in Fe and Ni isotope compositions among different unzoned grains may be explained by (1) a kinetic component during their condensation and/or (2) evaporation and condensation-driven reservoir effects in the plume, which resulted in light and heavy isotope signatures, respectively. Textural differences between CH and CBb are most pronounced in the mean grain size, which may be attributed to grain-size sorting. Such a process could also explain the lack of zoned metals in CBa chondrites, as zoned metal grains in CBb and CH chondrites are by more than a magnitude smaller than the mean metal grain size of CBa chondrites. In CR chondrites, metal within chondrules likely formed by fractional condensation from a solar type gas followed by subsequent melting leading to equilibration with chondrule silicates. Larger isolated metal grains from the matrix are less processed, and apparently escaped silicate equilibration. Those metal grains are indistinguishable from unzoned grains in CH and CB chondrites in trace elements and Fe and Ni isotopic compositions albeit with a slightly narrower compositional range. Based on these findings we conclude that metal precursors in CR chondrites are strongly related to unzoned metal in CH, and CB chondrites and possibly share a common origin. This metal component would be smallest in CR chondrites, larger in CH and dominant in CB chondrites which is also consistent with age constraints and isotopic anomalies observed in CR clan chondrites.

AB - Due to similarities in chemical composition and common Cr, Ti, N and O isotope trends, the metal-rich CR, CH and CB chondrites, often referred to as CR clan chondrites, are thought to be related to each other. This study aims to shed light on this relationship by the investigation of Fe and Ni isotope and trace element compositions of metal grains from CR and CH chondrites, in order to compare the results with previously reported data from CB chondrite metal. In situ trace element and Fe and Ni isotope analyses were conducted by femtosecond-laser ablation-(multicollector-)inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry (fs-LA-(MC-)ICP-MS). Furthermore, bulk CB metal and silicate separates were analyzed by solution MC-ICP-MS. Chemical compositions of metal grains in metal-rich chondrites are depleted in moderately volatile siderophile elements relative to the solar values with the exception of Pd. Such element abundance patterns are consistent with models of incomplete condensation from a gas with solar composition. Both, zoned and unzoned metal grains from CH and CB chondrites display very similar Fe and Ni isotopes compositions, indicating they likely formed within the same event, during non-equilibrium fractional condensation from an impact-induced vapor plume. This scenario is also supported by non-equilibrium Fe isotope signatures between bulk CB metal and silicate. Zoned metal grains likely formed in the fast-cooling outer shell region of the plume and are dominated by kinetic fractionation, resulting in isotopically light cores, while unzoned metal grains condensed under nearly equilibrium conditions, likely in the slow-cooling interior of the plume. Variability in Fe and Ni isotope compositions among different unzoned grains may be explained by (1) a kinetic component during their condensation and/or (2) evaporation and condensation-driven reservoir effects in the plume, which resulted in light and heavy isotope signatures, respectively. Textural differences between CH and CBb are most pronounced in the mean grain size, which may be attributed to grain-size sorting. Such a process could also explain the lack of zoned metals in CBa chondrites, as zoned metal grains in CBb and CH chondrites are by more than a magnitude smaller than the mean metal grain size of CBa chondrites. In CR chondrites, metal within chondrules likely formed by fractional condensation from a solar type gas followed by subsequent melting leading to equilibration with chondrule silicates. Larger isolated metal grains from the matrix are less processed, and apparently escaped silicate equilibration. Those metal grains are indistinguishable from unzoned grains in CH and CB chondrites in trace elements and Fe and Ni isotopic compositions albeit with a slightly narrower compositional range. Based on these findings we conclude that metal precursors in CR chondrites are strongly related to unzoned metal in CH, and CB chondrites and possibly share a common origin. This metal component would be smallest in CR chondrites, larger in CH and dominant in CB chondrites which is also consistent with age constraints and isotopic anomalies observed in CR clan chondrites.

KW - CB chondrites

KW - CH chondrites

KW - Condensation

KW - CR chondrites

KW - Fe and Ni isotopes

KW - Impact plume

KW - Zoned metal

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JO - Geochimica et cosmochimica acta

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ER -

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