Identification of the youngest meteorites and a discussion of the possibility that they came from Mars

The shergottites are a group of basaltic meteorites which are very similar in appearance to terrestrial basalts. On the Earth basalts are formed by volcanic activity. Because the shergottites so resemble terrestrial basalts and because they are apparently very young ( 1.3 billion years), it has been...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Jones, J. H.
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:unknown
Published: 1985
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2060/19850018248
Description
Summary:The shergottites are a group of basaltic meteorites which are very similar in appearance to terrestrial basalts. On the Earth basalts are formed by volcanic activity. Because the shergottites so resemble terrestrial basalts and because they are apparently very young ( 1.3 billion years), it has been inferred that they come from a large planet. Small planets and asteroids lose heat from their interiors quickly and stop producing hot basaltic liquids early in their history. It appears that gases trapped in one shergotite found in Antarctica (BETA 79001) are chemically similar to the martian atmosphere (as measured by the Viking mission). The controversial speculation that the shergotites are samples of mars is examined in detail.