Chassigny陨石中的碳酸盐和硫酸盐:SNC母行星水化学的进一步证据

S. Wentworth, J. Gooding
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引用次数: 81

摘要

扫描电子显微镜和能量色散x射线光谱法对来自三个不同Chassigny陨石标本的未经处理的内部碎片进行了分析,证实了碳酸钙、碳酸镁和硫酸钙的离散颗粒的存在。这些盐粒形貌表明碳酸钙为方解石(CaCO3),硫酸钙为石膏(CaSO4·2H2O)或玄武岩(CaSO4·1/2H2O)。碳酸镁的形态鉴定不明确,但菱面体和针状晶体习性分别提示为菱镁矿和氢菱镁矿。Chassigny中的盐在原生火成岩矿物中以不连续的脉状出现,与之前在nakhlite、Nakhla和Lafayette以及EETA79001中的盐相似。然而,与nakhlite中的盐不同,Chassigny盐单独存在,没有伴生的氧化铁或铝硅酸盐粘土。Chassigny盐中Cl和P的痕迹与从火成岩结晶后的短寿命盐水水溶液中析出的盐相一致。与nakhlites的明确案例相比,Chassigny的盐的史前起源的地层证据是模糊的;然而,Chassigny盐的史前起源最好地解释了所有现有的证据。水沉淀盐为其他工作人员提出的假设提供了明确的物理证据,即Chassigny的火成岩角闪孔可能与近地表水发生了同位素交换反应,从而破坏了熔体包裹体中任何岩浆水的原始稳定同位素特征。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Carbonates and sulfates in the Chassigny meteorite: Further evidence for aqueous chemistry on the SNC parent planet
— Scanning electron microscopy and energy-dispersive X-ray spectrometry of untreated interior chips from three different specimens of the Chassigny meteorite confirm the presence of discrete grains of Ca-carbonate, Mg-carbonate, and Ca-sulfate. Morphologies of these salt grains suggest that the Ca-carbonate is calcite (CaCO3) and that the Ca-sulfate is gypsum (CaSO4·2H2O) or bassanite (CaSO4·1/2H2O). The morphologic identification of the Mg-carbonate is equivocal, but rhombohedral and acicular crystal habits suggest magnesite and hydromagnesite, respectively. The salts in Chassigny occur as discontinuous veins in primary igneous minerals and are similar to those previously documented in the nakhlites, Nakhla and Lafayette, and in shergottite EETA79001. Unlike those in nakhlites, however, the Chassigny salts occur alone, without associated ferric oxides or aluminosilicate clays. Traces of Cl and P in Chassigny salts are consistent with precipitation of the salts from short-lived, saline, aqueous solutions that postdated igneous crystallization. In contrast with the clear case for nakhlites, stratigraphic evidence for a preterrestrial origin of the salts in Chassigny is ambiguous; however, a preterrestrial origin of the Chassigny salts best explains all available evidence. The water-precipitated salts provide clear physical evidence for the hypothesis, proposed by other workers, that the igneous amphiboles in Chassigny might have experienced isotope-exchange reactions with near-surface water, thereby compromising the original stable-isotope signature of any magmatic water in melt inclusions.
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