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  • Astrophysics  (2)
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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2013-08-31
    Description: The unique nature of chondrules has been known for nearly two centuries. Modern techniques of analysis have shown that these millimeter sized silicate objects are among the oldest objects in our solar system. Researchers have devised textural and chemical classification systems for chondrules in an effort to determine their origins. It is agreed that most chondrules were molten at some point in their history, and experimental analogs suggest that the majority of chondrules formed from temperatures below 1600 C at cooling rates in the range of hundreds of degrees per hour. Although interstellar grains are present in chondrite matrices, their contribution as precursors to chondrule formation is unknown. Models for chondrule formation focus on the pre-planetary solar nebula conditions, although planetary impact models have had proponents.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: From Stardust to Planetesimals: ASP Conference Series; Volume 122; 253-268
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2019-07-18
    Description: Pleistocene volcanic centers in NW Spitsbergen, Norway host one of the world's richest occurrences of mantle xenoliths. The xenoliths comprise varieties of spinel lherzolites and pyroxenites. Some of these xenoliths (and their host basalts) contain 10-100 micrometer globules of ankedtic-magnesitic carbonates (AMC). In composition, mineralogy and petrology the AMC globules from Spitsbergen are strikingly similar to the carbonate globules in ALH84001. The AMC globules occur within interstitial quenched glass and as fracture fillings, although we have not seen replacement fabrics analogous to carbonate rosettes replacing glass in ALH84001. Siderite/ankerite forms the core of these concentrically zoned globules while rims are predominantly magnesite. Clay minerals can occasionally be found within and around the globules. Aside from the clay minerals, the principal mineralogical difference between the AMCs and the ALH84001 carbonate rosettes is the presence of concentrated zones of nanophase magnetite in the rosettes, notably absent in the AMCs. However, carbonate globules containing nanophase magnetite have been produced inorganically by hydrothermal precipitation of carbonates and subsequent heating. We heated Spitsbergen AMC at 585 C in a reducing atmosphere to determine whether magnetite could be produced. Optical micrographs of the heated Spitsbergen AMC show dark concentric zones within the AMC. High resolution SEM images of those areas reveal 150-200 nm euhedral crystals that exhibit various morphologies including octahedra and elongated prisms. EDS analyses of areas where the crystals occur contain Fe, O, and minor Si, and P. However, the probe integrates over volumes of material, which also include the surrounding matrix. We have begun TEM observations of both the heated and unheated Spitsbergen AMC to characterize the microstructures of the carbonates, establish the presence/absence of magnetite and determine the relationship of the clay minerals to the carbonates and host rock.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: Geological Society of America Conference; Nov 01, 2001 - Nov 10, 2001; Boston, MA; United States
    Format: text
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