Frontier Mountain meteorite specimens of the Acapulco-Lodranite clan: petrography, pairing and parent-rock lithology of an unusual intrusive rock

In this paper we reconstruct the heterogeneous lithology of an unusual intrusive rock from the acapulcoite-lodranite (AL) parent asteroid on the basis of the petrographic analysis of 5 small (<8.3 g) meteorite specimens from the Frontier Mountain ice field (Antarctica). Although these individual...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Meteoritics & Planetary Science
Main Authors: Burroni A., Folco L.
Other Authors: Burroni, A., Folco, L.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2008
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11568/881047
https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1945-5100.1996.tb02021.x
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Summary:In this paper we reconstruct the heterogeneous lithology of an unusual intrusive rock from the acapulcoite-lodranite (AL) parent asteroid on the basis of the petrographic analysis of 5 small (<8.3 g) meteorite specimens from the Frontier Mountain ice field (Antarctica). Although these individual specimens may not be representative of the parent-rock lithology due to their relatively large grain size, by putting together evidence from various thin sections and literature data we conclude that Frontier Mountain (FRO) 90011, FRO 93001, FRO 99030, and FRO 03001 are paired fragments of a medium- to coarse-grained igneous rock which intrudes a lodranite and entrains xenoliths. The igneous matrix is composed of enstatite (Fs13.3±0.4 Wo3.1±0.2), Cr-rich augite (FS6.1±0.7 Wo42.3±0.9), and oligoclase (Ab80.5±3.3 Or3.2±0.6). The lodranitic xenoliths show a fine-grained (average grain size 488 ± 201 μm) granoblastic texture and consist of olivine Fa9.5±0.4 and Fe,Ni metal and minor amounts of enstatite Fs12.7±0.4 Wo1.8±0.1, troilite, chromite, schreibersite, and Ca-phosphates. Crystals of the igneous matrix and lodranitic xenoliths are devoid of shock features down to the scanning electron microscope scale. From a petrogenetic point of view, the lack of shock evidence in the lodranitic xenoliths of all the studied samples favors the magmatic rather than the impact melting origin of this rock. FRO 95029 is an acapulcoite and represents a separate fall from the AL parent asteroid, i.e., it is not a different clast entrained by the FRO 90011, FRO 93001, FRO 99030, and FRO 03001 melt, as in genomict breccias common in the meteoritic record. The specimen-to-meteorite ratio for the AL meteorites so far found at Frontier Mountain is thus 2.5.