TRACE ELEMENT ANALYSIS OF ANTARCTIC H CHONDRITES: CHEMICAL WEATHERING AND COMPARISONS WITH THEIR NON-ANTARCTIC COUNTERPARTS

Large numbers of meteorites have been discovered in Antarctica over the last decade (7000 fragments probably representing over 1200 separate events). They are important for their numbers and for their complement of unique or rare specimens; they also have long terrestrial ages (up to 1,000,000 years...

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Main Author: KWOK, JANE ELIZABETH DENNISON
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Purdue University 1986
Subjects:
Online Access:https://docs.lib.purdue.edu/dissertations/AAI8622176
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spelling ftpurdueuniv:oai:docs.lib.purdue.edu:dissertations-29043 2023-07-02T03:29:44+02:00 TRACE ELEMENT ANALYSIS OF ANTARCTIC H CHONDRITES: CHEMICAL WEATHERING AND COMPARISONS WITH THEIR NON-ANTARCTIC COUNTERPARTS KWOK, JANE ELIZABETH DENNISON 1986-01-01T08:00:00Z https://docs.lib.purdue.edu/dissertations/AAI8622176 ENG eng Purdue University https://docs.lib.purdue.edu/dissertations/AAI8622176 Theses and Dissertations Available from ProQuest Chemistry text 1986 ftpurdueuniv 2023-06-12T22:02:28Z Large numbers of meteorites have been discovered in Antarctica over the last decade (7000 fragments probably representing over 1200 separate events). They are important for their numbers and for their complement of unique or rare specimens; they also have long terrestrial ages (up to 1,000,000 years) compared to non-Antarctic falls (usually < 200 years). We report compositional data for mobile/volatile trace elements Ag, Au, Bi, Cd, Co, Cs, In, Rb, Sb, Se, Te, Tl, U, and Zn in a suite of Antarctic H chondrites. Our data show that heavily oxidized H chondrites are leached of a portion of their trace elements and, therefore, have been chemically compromised by their stay in Antarctica. The less oxidized specimens seem to have retained their chemical integrity. We suggest possibilities for using chemical data to measure the degree of a chondrite's chemical weathering. We compare our data to that obtained previously for non-Antarctic H chondrites (Lingner et al., 1986), by petrologic type (H4, H5, H6, H4-6) and shock-loading (moderately shocked facies a-c, heavily shocked facies d-f). Many statistically significant differences are found between non-Antarctic and Victoria Land, Antarctica H chondrites of each petrologic type and of shock facies d-f. Leaching of the Victoria Land chondrites is not a viable explanation for these differences because many mean elemental concentrations are higher in the Victoria Land population. Two-element scatter plots of Bi, In, and Tl also reveal remarkable differences which cannot be due to shock-heating or leaching of Victoria Land chondrites, even though this population has a higher percentage of heavily shocked chondrites than the non-Antarctic population. After ruling out alternate explanations, we believe these differences to be preterrestrial and attribute them to a changing meteoroid flux to Earth with time. Text Antarc* Antarctic Antarctica Victoria Land Purdue University: e-Pubs Antarctic Victoria Land
institution Open Polar
collection Purdue University: e-Pubs
op_collection_id ftpurdueuniv
language English
topic Chemistry
spellingShingle Chemistry
KWOK, JANE ELIZABETH DENNISON
TRACE ELEMENT ANALYSIS OF ANTARCTIC H CHONDRITES: CHEMICAL WEATHERING AND COMPARISONS WITH THEIR NON-ANTARCTIC COUNTERPARTS
topic_facet Chemistry
description Large numbers of meteorites have been discovered in Antarctica over the last decade (7000 fragments probably representing over 1200 separate events). They are important for their numbers and for their complement of unique or rare specimens; they also have long terrestrial ages (up to 1,000,000 years) compared to non-Antarctic falls (usually < 200 years). We report compositional data for mobile/volatile trace elements Ag, Au, Bi, Cd, Co, Cs, In, Rb, Sb, Se, Te, Tl, U, and Zn in a suite of Antarctic H chondrites. Our data show that heavily oxidized H chondrites are leached of a portion of their trace elements and, therefore, have been chemically compromised by their stay in Antarctica. The less oxidized specimens seem to have retained their chemical integrity. We suggest possibilities for using chemical data to measure the degree of a chondrite's chemical weathering. We compare our data to that obtained previously for non-Antarctic H chondrites (Lingner et al., 1986), by petrologic type (H4, H5, H6, H4-6) and shock-loading (moderately shocked facies a-c, heavily shocked facies d-f). Many statistically significant differences are found between non-Antarctic and Victoria Land, Antarctica H chondrites of each petrologic type and of shock facies d-f. Leaching of the Victoria Land chondrites is not a viable explanation for these differences because many mean elemental concentrations are higher in the Victoria Land population. Two-element scatter plots of Bi, In, and Tl also reveal remarkable differences which cannot be due to shock-heating or leaching of Victoria Land chondrites, even though this population has a higher percentage of heavily shocked chondrites than the non-Antarctic population. After ruling out alternate explanations, we believe these differences to be preterrestrial and attribute them to a changing meteoroid flux to Earth with time.
format Text
author KWOK, JANE ELIZABETH DENNISON
author_facet KWOK, JANE ELIZABETH DENNISON
author_sort KWOK, JANE ELIZABETH DENNISON
title TRACE ELEMENT ANALYSIS OF ANTARCTIC H CHONDRITES: CHEMICAL WEATHERING AND COMPARISONS WITH THEIR NON-ANTARCTIC COUNTERPARTS
title_short TRACE ELEMENT ANALYSIS OF ANTARCTIC H CHONDRITES: CHEMICAL WEATHERING AND COMPARISONS WITH THEIR NON-ANTARCTIC COUNTERPARTS
title_full TRACE ELEMENT ANALYSIS OF ANTARCTIC H CHONDRITES: CHEMICAL WEATHERING AND COMPARISONS WITH THEIR NON-ANTARCTIC COUNTERPARTS
title_fullStr TRACE ELEMENT ANALYSIS OF ANTARCTIC H CHONDRITES: CHEMICAL WEATHERING AND COMPARISONS WITH THEIR NON-ANTARCTIC COUNTERPARTS
title_full_unstemmed TRACE ELEMENT ANALYSIS OF ANTARCTIC H CHONDRITES: CHEMICAL WEATHERING AND COMPARISONS WITH THEIR NON-ANTARCTIC COUNTERPARTS
title_sort trace element analysis of antarctic h chondrites: chemical weathering and comparisons with their non-antarctic counterparts
publisher Purdue University
publishDate 1986
url https://docs.lib.purdue.edu/dissertations/AAI8622176
geographic Antarctic
Victoria Land
geographic_facet Antarctic
Victoria Land
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
Victoria Land
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
Victoria Land
op_source Theses and Dissertations Available from ProQuest
op_relation https://docs.lib.purdue.edu/dissertations/AAI8622176
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