Isotopic compositions of oxygen, iron, chromium, and nickel in cosmic spherules: Toward a better comprehension of atmospheric entry heating effects

Large, correlated, mass-dependent enrichments in the heavier isotopes of O, Cr, Fe, and Ni are observed in type-I (metal/metal oxide) cosmic spherules collected from the deep sea. Limited intraparticle variability of oxygen isotope abundances, typically <5‰ in δ¹⁸O, indicates good mixing of the m...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta
Main Authors: Engrand, Cécile, McKeegan, Kevin D., Leshin, Laurie A., Herzog, Gregory F., Schnabel, Christoph, Nyquist, Laurence E., Brownlee, Donald E.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: Elsevier 2005
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gca.2005.07.002
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Summary:Large, correlated, mass-dependent enrichments in the heavier isotopes of O, Cr, Fe, and Ni are observed in type-I (metal/metal oxide) cosmic spherules collected from the deep sea. Limited intraparticle variability of oxygen isotope abundances, typically <5‰ in δ¹⁸O, indicates good mixing of the melts and supports the application of the Rayleigh equation for the calculation of fractional evaporative losses during atmospheric entry. Fractional losses for oxygen evaporation from wüstite, assuming a starting isotopic composition equal to that of air (δ¹⁸O = 23.5‰; δ¹⁷O = 11.8‰), are in the range 55%–77%, and are systematically smaller than evaporative losses calculated for Fe (69%–85%), Cr (81%–95%), and especially Ni (45%–99%). However, as δ¹⁸O values increase, fractional losses for oxygen approach those of Fe, Cr, and Ni indicating a shift in the evaporating species from metallic to oxidized forms as the spherules are progressively oxidized during entry heating. The observed unequal fractional losses of O and Fe can be reconciled by allowing for a kinetic isotope mass-dependent fractionation of atmospheric oxygen during the oxidation process and/or that some metallic Fe may have undergone Rayleigh evaporation before oxidation began. In situ measurements of oxygen isotopic abundances were also performed in 14 type-S (silicate) cosmic spherules, 13 from the Antarctic ice and one from the deep sea. Additional bulk Fe and Cr isotopic abundances were determined for two type-S deep-sea spherules. The isotopic fractionation of Cr isotopes suggest appreciable evaporative loss of Cr, perhaps as a sulfide. The oxygen isotopic compositions for the type-S spherules range from δ¹⁸O = −2‰ to + 27‰. The intraspherule isotopic variations are typically small, ∼5% relative, except for the less-heated porphyritic spherules which have preserved large isotopic heterogeneities in at least one case. A plot of δ¹⁷O vs. δ¹⁸O values for these spherules defines a broad parallelogram bounded at higher values of δ¹⁷O by the terrestrial ...