Artificial weathering of an ordinary chondrite: Recommendations for the curation of Antarctic meteorites
Meteorites are prone to errestrial weathering not only after their fall on the Earth’s surface but also during storage in museum collections. To study the susceptibility of this material to weathering, weathering experiments were carried out on polished sections of the H5 chondrite Asuka 10177. The...
Published in: | Meteoritics & Planetary Science |
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Main Authors: | , , , , , , , , |
Format: | Article in Journal/Newspaper |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Meteoritical Society
2022
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: | https://kar.kent.ac.uk/97050/ https://doi.org/10.1111/maps.13818 |
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author | van Ginneken, Matthias Debaille, Vinciane Decrée, Sophie Goderis, Steven Woodland, Alan Wozniakiewicz, Penelope J. De Ceukelaire, Marleen Leduc, Thierry Claeys, Philippe |
author_facet | van Ginneken, Matthias Debaille, Vinciane Decrée, Sophie Goderis, Steven Woodland, Alan Wozniakiewicz, Penelope J. De Ceukelaire, Marleen Leduc, Thierry Claeys, Philippe |
author_sort | van Ginneken, Matthias |
collection | University of Kent: KAR - Kent Academic Repository |
container_issue | 6 |
container_start_page | 1247 |
container_title | Meteoritics & Planetary Science |
container_volume | 57 |
description | Meteorites are prone to errestrial weathering not only after their fall on the Earth’s surface but also during storage in museum collections. To study the susceptibility of this material to weathering, weathering experiments were carried out on polished sections of the H5 chondrite Asuka 10177. The experiments consisted of four 100-days cycles during which temperature and humidity varied on a twelve hours basis. The first alteration cycle consisted of changing the temperature from 15 to 25 °C; the second cycle consisted of modifying both humidity and temperature from 35 to 45% and 15 to 25 °C, respectively; the third cycle consisted of varying the humidity level from 40 to 60%; and the fourth cycle maintained a fixed high humidity of 80%. Weathering products resulting from the experiments were identified and characterized using scanning electron microscopy–energy dispersive spectroscopy and Raman spectroscopy. Such products were not observed at the microscopic scale after the first cycle of alteration. Conversely, products typical of the corrosion of meteoritic FeNi metal were observed during scanning electron microscope surveys after all subsequent cycles. Important increases in the distribution of weathering products on the samples were observed after cycles 2 and 4 but not after cycle 3, suggesting that the combination of temperature and humidity fluctuations or high humidity (>60%) alone is most detrimental to chondritic samples. Chemistry of the weathering products revealed a high degree of FeNi metal corrosion with a limited contribution of troilite corrosion. No clear evidence of mafic silicate alteration was observed after all cycles, suggesting that postretrieval alteration remains limited to FeNi metal and to a lesser extent to troilite. |
format | Article in Journal/Newspaper |
genre | Antarc* Antarctic |
genre_facet | Antarc* Antarctic |
geographic | Antarctic |
geographic_facet | Antarctic |
id | ftkentuniv:oai:kar.kent.ac.uk:97050 |
institution | Open Polar |
language | English |
op_collection_id | ftkentuniv |
op_container_end_page | 1266 |
op_doi | https://doi.org/10.1111/maps.13818 |
op_relation | https://kar.kent.ac.uk/97050/1/Meteorit%20Planetary%20Scien%20-%202022%20-%20Ginneken%20-%20Artificial%20weathering%20of%20an%20ordinary%20chondrite%20Recommendations%20for%20the.pdf van Ginneken, Matthias, Debaille, Vinciane, Decrée, Sophie, Goderis, Steven, Woodland, Alan, Wozniakiewicz, Penelope J., De Ceukelaire, Marleen, Leduc, Thierry, Claeys, Philippe (2022) Artificial weathering of an ordinary chondrite: Recommendations for the curation of Antarctic meteorites. Meteoritics & Planetary Science, 57 (6). pp. 1247-1266. ISSN 1086-9379. (doi:10.1111/maps.13818 <https://doi.org/10.1111/maps.13818>) (KAR id:97050 </97050>) |
publishDate | 2022 |
publisher | Meteoritical Society |
record_format | openpolar |
spelling | ftkentuniv:oai:kar.kent.ac.uk:97050 2025-04-13T14:10:35+00:00 Artificial weathering of an ordinary chondrite: Recommendations for the curation of Antarctic meteorites van Ginneken, Matthias Debaille, Vinciane Decrée, Sophie Goderis, Steven Woodland, Alan Wozniakiewicz, Penelope J. De Ceukelaire, Marleen Leduc, Thierry Claeys, Philippe 2022-05-05 application/pdf https://kar.kent.ac.uk/97050/ https://doi.org/10.1111/maps.13818 en eng Meteoritical Society https://kar.kent.ac.uk/97050/1/Meteorit%20Planetary%20Scien%20-%202022%20-%20Ginneken%20-%20Artificial%20weathering%20of%20an%20ordinary%20chondrite%20Recommendations%20for%20the.pdf van Ginneken, Matthias, Debaille, Vinciane, Decrée, Sophie, Goderis, Steven, Woodland, Alan, Wozniakiewicz, Penelope J., De Ceukelaire, Marleen, Leduc, Thierry, Claeys, Philippe (2022) Artificial weathering of an ordinary chondrite: Recommendations for the curation of Antarctic meteorites. Meteoritics & Planetary Science, 57 (6). pp. 1247-1266. ISSN 1086-9379. (doi:10.1111/maps.13818 <https://doi.org/10.1111/maps.13818>) (KAR id:97050 </97050>) QB651 Planets Minor QE515 Geochemistry Article PeerReviewed 2022 ftkentuniv https://doi.org/10.1111/maps.13818 2025-03-19T05:15:32Z Meteorites are prone to errestrial weathering not only after their fall on the Earth’s surface but also during storage in museum collections. To study the susceptibility of this material to weathering, weathering experiments were carried out on polished sections of the H5 chondrite Asuka 10177. The experiments consisted of four 100-days cycles during which temperature and humidity varied on a twelve hours basis. The first alteration cycle consisted of changing the temperature from 15 to 25 °C; the second cycle consisted of modifying both humidity and temperature from 35 to 45% and 15 to 25 °C, respectively; the third cycle consisted of varying the humidity level from 40 to 60%; and the fourth cycle maintained a fixed high humidity of 80%. Weathering products resulting from the experiments were identified and characterized using scanning electron microscopy–energy dispersive spectroscopy and Raman spectroscopy. Such products were not observed at the microscopic scale after the first cycle of alteration. Conversely, products typical of the corrosion of meteoritic FeNi metal were observed during scanning electron microscope surveys after all subsequent cycles. Important increases in the distribution of weathering products on the samples were observed after cycles 2 and 4 but not after cycle 3, suggesting that the combination of temperature and humidity fluctuations or high humidity (>60%) alone is most detrimental to chondritic samples. Chemistry of the weathering products revealed a high degree of FeNi metal corrosion with a limited contribution of troilite corrosion. No clear evidence of mafic silicate alteration was observed after all cycles, suggesting that postretrieval alteration remains limited to FeNi metal and to a lesser extent to troilite. Article in Journal/Newspaper Antarc* Antarctic University of Kent: KAR - Kent Academic Repository Antarctic Meteoritics & Planetary Science 57 6 1247 1266 |
spellingShingle | QB651 Planets Minor QE515 Geochemistry van Ginneken, Matthias Debaille, Vinciane Decrée, Sophie Goderis, Steven Woodland, Alan Wozniakiewicz, Penelope J. De Ceukelaire, Marleen Leduc, Thierry Claeys, Philippe Artificial weathering of an ordinary chondrite: Recommendations for the curation of Antarctic meteorites |
title | Artificial weathering of an ordinary chondrite: Recommendations for the curation of Antarctic meteorites |
title_full | Artificial weathering of an ordinary chondrite: Recommendations for the curation of Antarctic meteorites |
title_fullStr | Artificial weathering of an ordinary chondrite: Recommendations for the curation of Antarctic meteorites |
title_full_unstemmed | Artificial weathering of an ordinary chondrite: Recommendations for the curation of Antarctic meteorites |
title_short | Artificial weathering of an ordinary chondrite: Recommendations for the curation of Antarctic meteorites |
title_sort | artificial weathering of an ordinary chondrite: recommendations for the curation of antarctic meteorites |
topic | QB651 Planets Minor QE515 Geochemistry |
topic_facet | QB651 Planets Minor QE515 Geochemistry |
url | https://kar.kent.ac.uk/97050/ https://doi.org/10.1111/maps.13818 |