Petrological and experimental study of CV-CK chondrites and conditions of metamorphism in carbonaceous asteroids
Carbonaceous chondrites (CCs) are primitive objects accreted during the earliest stage of the Solar System formation. Mainly composed of chondrules, matrix and refractory inclusions, CCs recorded chemical, isotopic and mineralogical heterogeneities of the solar nebula. Unlike other chondrite classes...
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Other Authors: | , , , , , , |
Format: | Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis |
Language: | French |
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HAL CCSD
2012
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: | https://theses.hal.science/tel-00719574 https://theses.hal.science/tel-00719574/document https://theses.hal.science/tel-00719574/file/Chaumard-2012CLF22226.pdf |
Summary: | Carbonaceous chondrites (CCs) are primitive objects accreted during the earliest stage of the Solar System formation. Mainly composed of chondrules, matrix and refractory inclusions, CCs recorded chemical, isotopic and mineralogical heterogeneities of the solar nebula. Unlike other chondrite classes, most CCs are primitive (petrologic types 1 to 3), i.e., they have not been affected by thermal parent-body processes. However, CK chondrites suffered an intense metamorphism (petrologic types 4 to 6). The CK group is characterized by recrystallized matrices, equilibrated olivines (∼Fa31), a high level of oxidation (Ni-rich olivines, metal/magnetite ratio close to zero), low contents of refractory inclusions, refractory lithophile abundances intermediate between CV and CO groups, and oxygen isotope compositions overlapping the CV and CO groups. CKs have been poorly studied until the 1990’s, in part due to the small number of classified samples (210 as of December 6th, 2011), and their small masses (median mass∼33.5g). Isotopic and major element compositions support a genetic link with CV3s. Since1990, recent discoveries of CKs, in particular of CK3s recovered by systematic Antarctic and Saharan collects, allow a detailed study of the CK metamorphic evolution, especially at the 3–4 transition. The objective of this study is the characterization of the conditions of metamorphism of CKs, and through analyses of several CK3–4 samples, the study of the CV-CK relationship. The detailed characterization of the metamorphic evolution of 19 CKs, including 5 CK3, confirms that observed differences between chondritic components in CVs and CKs (abundance, mineralogy, texture) can be explained by a secondary HT-BP thermal process (∼300–650°C) under oxidizing conditions (∼NNO). Moreover, durations of metamorphism obtained by the analysis of diffusion profiles in CK chondrules are intermediate between those commonly admitted for shock (few seconds to several days) and for short-lived radionuclides decay (several million years). An ... |
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