Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6438523 Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 2014 84 Pages PDF
Abstract
The wide range in the degree of aqueous alteration of CR chondrites prompted us to formulate a numerical sequence for these rocks that ranges from petrologic type 2.0 to 2.8. (Hypothetical CR3.0 chondrites should be completely free of aqueous alteration effects.) About 70% of CR chondrites are slightly altered, type-2.8 rocks that exhibit heterogeneous alteration; these meteorites contain moderately abundant metallic Fe-Ni, no magnetite, and generally, a few chondrules with clear glassy mesostases. None of the chondrules in these rocks shows evidence of alteration of mafic silicate phenocrysts, but several chondrules are surrounded by phyllosilicate-rich rims that appear “smooth” when viewed by back-scattered-electron imaging. Matrix regions in slightly altered CR chondrites contain high S (∼3 wt.%), but some matrix patches in the same thin sections record alteration effects and contain appreciably less S (<1.5 wt.%). In CR chondrites that have been more-significantly altered (e.g., Renazzo and Al Rais), metallic Fe-Ni has been partially replaced by magnetite ± sulfide; mafic silicates have been partly altered to phyllosilicates, particularly along edges, fractures and twin boundaries. One of the most-altered CR chondrites (type-2.0 GRO 95577) contains abundant magnetite, additional oxide phases, iron carbonate, only very rare metallic Fe-Ni and essentially no mafic silicate grains. The whole-rock O-isotopic compositions of CR chondrites correlate with the degree of aqueous alteration: Δ17O ranges from ∼−2.6‰ in type-2.8 samples to ∼−0.4‰ in type 2.0.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Geochemistry and Petrology
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