A chemical and petrological study of igneous lithic clasts from the kapoeta howardite

Instrumental and radiochemical neutron activation analyses supported by electron microprobe mineral analyses (Paul Warren, University of New Mexico) and petrographic observations are presented for approximately forty individual clasts separated from the Kapoeta howardite. These clasts are classified...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Smith, Monty Ray
Other Authors: Schmitt, Roman A., Chemistry, Oregon State University. Graduate School
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:English
unknown
Published: Oregon State University
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ir.library.oregonstate.edu/concern/graduate_thesis_or_dissertations/kp78gk584
Description
Summary:Instrumental and radiochemical neutron activation analyses supported by electron microprobe mineral analyses (Paul Warren, University of New Mexico) and petrographic observations are presented for approximately forty individual clasts separated from the Kapoeta howardite. These clasts are classified into eucritic, cumulate-like, mafic (plagioclase ± olivine-bearing pyroxenites), pyroxenite, polymict and/or metal-rich and chondritic components. Geochemical inferences are presented which suggest significant compositional variations in the eucritic clasts as compared to normal 'main' group eucrites. Clasts of mafic lithologies have chemistries which suggest primary magmas. These primitive primary compositions can be derived from sources which are essentially CH or CL ordinary chondrite-like compositions with the exception of ~̲13-fold depletions in the volatile alkali elements (Na, K, Rb and Cs). An extensive partial melt origin if preferred for the genesis of these mafic magmas. Source Fe' (Fe/Fe-I-Mg molar) values suggested by the most Mg-rich eucritic and Antarctic eucrites (-0.28) vs. the ordinary chondrite source values (-0.23) are reasonably close; however, normal eucrites suggest source Fe' values of -0.35. Although eucritic clasts and known Antarctic eucrites can reasonably be derived from sources which produced the mafic magmas by partial melting followed by minor (<20%) orthopyroxene fractionation, normal eucrites having greater and nearly constant Fe' values and nearly unfractionated trivalent REE patterns cannot be produced by similar mechanisms and are therefore concluded to have significantly different source compositions. In such cases a secondary melt origin from enriched non-chondritic sources is inferred for normal eucrites. Eucritic and pyroxenitic cumulates have compositions which infer the presence of trapped liquid components. The trapped liquid probably resulted from inefficient solid phase accumulation due to small parent body gravitational fields. Final conclusions are presented which ...