Cosmogenic radionuclides in L5 and LL5 chondrites from Queen Alexandra Range, Antarctica: Identification of a large L/LL5 chondrite shower with a preatmospheric mass of approximately 50,000 kg

The collection of approximately 3300 meteorites from the Queen Alexandra Range (QUE) area, Antarctica, is dominated by more than 2000 chondrites classified as either L5 or LL5. Based on concentrations of the cosmogenic radionuclides 10Be, 26Al, 36Cl, and 41Ca in the metal and stone fraction of 16 QU...

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Main Authors: Welten, K. C., Caffee, M. W., Hillegonds, D. J., McCoy, T. J., Masarik, J., Nishiizumi, K.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Purdue University 2011
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Online Access:https://docs.lib.purdue.edu/physics_articles/1343
https://docs.lib.purdue.edu/context/physics_articles/article/3130/viewcontent/welten_20caffee_20feb_202011.pdf
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spelling ftpurdueuniv:oai:docs.lib.purdue.edu:physics_articles-3130 2023-07-02T03:30:08+02:00 Cosmogenic radionuclides in L5 and LL5 chondrites from Queen Alexandra Range, Antarctica: Identification of a large L/LL5 chondrite shower with a preatmospheric mass of approximately 50,000 kg Welten, K. C. Caffee, M. W. Hillegonds, D. J. McCoy, T. J. Masarik, J. Nishiizumi, K. 2011-02-01T08:00:00Z application/pdf https://docs.lib.purdue.edu/physics_articles/1343 https://docs.lib.purdue.edu/context/physics_articles/article/3130/viewcontent/welten_20caffee_20feb_202011.pdf unknown Purdue University https://docs.lib.purdue.edu/physics_articles/1343 https://docs.lib.purdue.edu/context/physics_articles/article/3130/viewcontent/welten_20caffee_20feb_202011.pdf Department of Physics and Astronomy Faculty Publications text 2011 ftpurdueuniv 2023-06-12T20:33:26Z The collection of approximately 3300 meteorites from the Queen Alexandra Range (QUE) area, Antarctica, is dominated by more than 2000 chondrites classified as either L5 or LL5. Based on concentrations of the cosmogenic radionuclides 10Be, 26Al, 36Cl, and 41Ca in the metal and stone fraction of 16 QUE L5 or LL5 chondrites, we conclude that 13 meteorites belong to a single meteorite shower, QUE 90201, with a large preatmospheric size and a terrestrial age of 125 kyr. Members of this shower have properties typical of L (e.g., pyroxene composition) and LL chondrites (e.g., metal abundance and composition), as well as properties intermediate between the L and LL groups (e.g., olivine composition), and is thus best described as an L/LL5 chondrite. Based on comparison with model calculations, the measured radionuclide concentrations in the metal and stone fractions of QUE 90201 indicate irradiation in an object with a preatmospheric radius of approximately 150 cm, representing one of the largest chondrites known so far. Based on the abundance of small L5 and LL5 chondrites at QUE and their distinct mass distribution, we conclude that the QUE 90201 shower includes up to 2000 fragments with a total recovered mass of 60-70 kg, < 1% of the preatmospheric mass of approximately 50,000 kg. The mass distribution of the QUE 90201 shower suggests that the meteoroid experienced catastrophic atmospheric fragmentation(s), either because it was a fragile object or it had a high entry velocity. Text Antarc* Antarctica Purdue University: e-Pubs
institution Open Polar
collection Purdue University: e-Pubs
op_collection_id ftpurdueuniv
language unknown
description The collection of approximately 3300 meteorites from the Queen Alexandra Range (QUE) area, Antarctica, is dominated by more than 2000 chondrites classified as either L5 or LL5. Based on concentrations of the cosmogenic radionuclides 10Be, 26Al, 36Cl, and 41Ca in the metal and stone fraction of 16 QUE L5 or LL5 chondrites, we conclude that 13 meteorites belong to a single meteorite shower, QUE 90201, with a large preatmospheric size and a terrestrial age of 125 kyr. Members of this shower have properties typical of L (e.g., pyroxene composition) and LL chondrites (e.g., metal abundance and composition), as well as properties intermediate between the L and LL groups (e.g., olivine composition), and is thus best described as an L/LL5 chondrite. Based on comparison with model calculations, the measured radionuclide concentrations in the metal and stone fractions of QUE 90201 indicate irradiation in an object with a preatmospheric radius of approximately 150 cm, representing one of the largest chondrites known so far. Based on the abundance of small L5 and LL5 chondrites at QUE and their distinct mass distribution, we conclude that the QUE 90201 shower includes up to 2000 fragments with a total recovered mass of 60-70 kg, < 1% of the preatmospheric mass of approximately 50,000 kg. The mass distribution of the QUE 90201 shower suggests that the meteoroid experienced catastrophic atmospheric fragmentation(s), either because it was a fragile object or it had a high entry velocity.
format Text
author Welten, K. C.
Caffee, M. W.
Hillegonds, D. J.
McCoy, T. J.
Masarik, J.
Nishiizumi, K.
spellingShingle Welten, K. C.
Caffee, M. W.
Hillegonds, D. J.
McCoy, T. J.
Masarik, J.
Nishiizumi, K.
Cosmogenic radionuclides in L5 and LL5 chondrites from Queen Alexandra Range, Antarctica: Identification of a large L/LL5 chondrite shower with a preatmospheric mass of approximately 50,000 kg
author_facet Welten, K. C.
Caffee, M. W.
Hillegonds, D. J.
McCoy, T. J.
Masarik, J.
Nishiizumi, K.
author_sort Welten, K. C.
title Cosmogenic radionuclides in L5 and LL5 chondrites from Queen Alexandra Range, Antarctica: Identification of a large L/LL5 chondrite shower with a preatmospheric mass of approximately 50,000 kg
title_short Cosmogenic radionuclides in L5 and LL5 chondrites from Queen Alexandra Range, Antarctica: Identification of a large L/LL5 chondrite shower with a preatmospheric mass of approximately 50,000 kg
title_full Cosmogenic radionuclides in L5 and LL5 chondrites from Queen Alexandra Range, Antarctica: Identification of a large L/LL5 chondrite shower with a preatmospheric mass of approximately 50,000 kg
title_fullStr Cosmogenic radionuclides in L5 and LL5 chondrites from Queen Alexandra Range, Antarctica: Identification of a large L/LL5 chondrite shower with a preatmospheric mass of approximately 50,000 kg
title_full_unstemmed Cosmogenic radionuclides in L5 and LL5 chondrites from Queen Alexandra Range, Antarctica: Identification of a large L/LL5 chondrite shower with a preatmospheric mass of approximately 50,000 kg
title_sort cosmogenic radionuclides in l5 and ll5 chondrites from queen alexandra range, antarctica: identification of a large l/ll5 chondrite shower with a preatmospheric mass of approximately 50,000 kg
publisher Purdue University
publishDate 2011
url https://docs.lib.purdue.edu/physics_articles/1343
https://docs.lib.purdue.edu/context/physics_articles/article/3130/viewcontent/welten_20caffee_20feb_202011.pdf
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Antarctica
op_source Department of Physics and Astronomy Faculty Publications
op_relation https://docs.lib.purdue.edu/physics_articles/1343
https://docs.lib.purdue.edu/context/physics_articles/article/3130/viewcontent/welten_20caffee_20feb_202011.pdf
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