In situ identification, pairing and classification of meteorites from Antarctica through magnetic susceptibility measurements

We report on the effectiveness of using magnetic measurements in the search for meteorites on the Antarctic ice sheet, which is thus far the Earth's most productive terrain. Magnetic Susceptibility measurements carried Out with a pocket meter (SM30) during the 2003/04 PNRA meteorite collection...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Meteoritics & Planetary Science
Main Authors: FOLCO, LUIGI, Rochette P, Gattacceca J, PERCHIAZZI, NATALE
Other Authors: Folco, Luigi, Rochette, P, Gattacceca, J, Perchiazzi, Natale
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11568/105328
https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1945-5100.2006.tb00467.x
Description
Summary:We report on the effectiveness of using magnetic measurements in the search for meteorites on the Antarctic ice sheet, which is thus far the Earth's most productive terrain. Magnetic Susceptibility measurements carried Out with a pocket meter (SM30) during the 2003/04 PNRA meteorite collection expedition to northern Victoria Land (Antarctica) proved to be a rapid, sensitive, non-destructive means for the ill Situ identification, pairing, and classification of meteorites. In blue ice fields characterized by the presence of moraines and glacial drifts (e.g., Miller Butte, Roberts Butte, and Frontier Mountain), magnetic susceptibility measurements allowed discrimination of meteorites from abundant terrestrial stones that look like meteorites thanks to the relatively high magnetic Susceptibility of the former with respect to terrestrial rocks. Comparative measurements helped identify 16 paired fragments found at Johannessen Nunataks, thereby reducing unnecessary duplication of laboratory analyses and statistical bias. Following classifications schemes developed by LIS in this and previous works, magnetic susceptibility measurements also helped classify stony meteorites directly in the field, thereby providing a means for selecting samples with higher research priority. A magnetic gradiometer capable of detecting perturbations in the Earth's magnetic field induced by the presence of meteorites was an efficient tool for locating meteorites buried in snow along the downwind margin of the Frontier Mountain blue ice Field. Based on these results, we believe that magnetic sensors Should constitute an additional payload for robotic search for meteorites on the Antarctic ice sheet and, by extension, on the Surface of Mars where meteorite accumulations are predicted by theoretical works. Lastly, magnetic Susceptibility data was successfully Used to crosscheck the later petrographic classification of the 123 recovered meteorites, allowing the detection of misclassified or Peculiar specimens.