First andesitic meteorite
A most important contribution to meteoritic research comes from Day
et al.1 Basaltic meteorites (e.g eucrites, howardites) provide evidence that, like terrestrial planets, some asteroids generated crust, undergoing large-scale differentiation processes. Until now, no felsic asteroidal crust has been represented among the many described meteorite types. However, the paired, differentiated Antarctic-sourced Graves Nunatak (GRA) 06128 & 06129 are feldspar-rich, with andesitic bulk composition. These have an age of formation close to the formation of the solar system – 4.52 (plus or minus 0.06) Gyr. They are believed to emanate from partial melts in a volatile-rich, oxidised asteroidal parent body. This implies a quite new style of crust formation and a previously unknown diversity in the early formed materials of the solar system. The authors publish plots of δO
18 and ΔO
17, also of Re-Os isotope systematics: from these it is clear that these meteorites are closest to the brachinites, lodranites and acupulcoites, rare meteorites that “draw a blurred line between achondrites (differentiated meteorites ) and chondrites. They are all igneous or metamorphic rocks, but hold a tantalising record of their chondritic pedigree
2. They even, in rare cases, preserve isolated chondrules, and these seem to represent incomplete obliteration in the metamorphic process. Such meteorites can be considered as extreme cases of the metamorphic processes which progressively affected some chondritic meteorites. The polymict ureilites, also differentiated meteorites, contain chondrules, but these are typically in contained clasts, and are mainly of the rare Rumuruti (R) chondrites, and it is believed that an R-chondrite asteroidal body and some other chondrite bits collided in Space long ago with the ureilite parent body.
- Day, J M D , Ash, R D , Yang Liu, Belucci, J J , Rumble, D III , Mc Donough, W F , Walker,R J , Taylor, L A 2003: Early formation of evolved asteroidal crust Nature 457(8); 179-182
- Bevan, A , de Laeter, J R 2007: Meteorites: a journey through space and time Smithsonian Institute Press, Washington, London; 215 pp