Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6305851 | Chemie der Erde - Geochemistry | 2014 | 17 Pages |
Abstract
In common with the remarkable variation in the bulk rock Zr content of distinct meteorite groups, ranging from <1 ppm to >800 ppm, the occurrence and abundance of accessory zircon is also highly diverse and limited to certain meteorite classes. A detailed literature study on the occurrence of meteoritic zircon, along with other Zr-bearing phases reveals that lunar rocks, eucrites and mesosiderites are the prime sources of meteoritic zircon. Rare zircon grains occur in chondrites, silicate-bearing iron meteorites and Martian meteorites, with grain sizes of >5 μm allowing chemical and chronological studies at high spatial resolution using secondary ion mass spectrometry (SIMS) technique. Grain sizes, crystal habits, structural and chemical characteristics of zircon grains derived from various meteorite types, including their REE abundances, minor element concentrations, and Zr/Hf values is diverse. Superchondritic Zr/Hf values (47 ± 8; s.d. with n = 97), i.e., typical for zircon in eucrites and mesosiderites, indicate crystallization from a fractionated, incompatible-element-rich (residual) melt. Differences in REE abundances, occurrence or absence of Ce- and Eu-anomalies, and overall REE patterns that are often fractionated with a depletion in LREE, might be primarily controlled by variable formation conditions of individual grains and/or differences in the residual melt compositions on a small, local scale within single samples. Subsequent fractionation/modification of the chemical fingerprint of meteoritic zircon can involve high-temperature annealing processes during thermal metamorphic reactions and/or impact events along with mixing of lithic fragments since many samples are breccias.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Geochemistry and Petrology
Authors
Julia Roszjar, Martin J. Whitehouse, Addi Bischoff,