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Trace element geochemistry of CR chondrite metal
Authors:Emmanuel Jacquet  Marine Paulhiac‐Pison  Olivier Alard  Anton T Kearsley  Matthieu Gounelle
Institution:1. Laboratoire de Minéralogie et Cosmochimie du Muséum, CNRS & Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle, , 75005 Paris, France;2. Canadian Institute for Theoretical Astrophysics, University of Toronto, , Toronto, ON, M5S 3H8 Canada;3. Ecole Normale Supérieure de Paris, , 75005 Paris, France;4. Géosciences Montpellier, Université de Montpellier II, , 34095 Montpellier Cedex 5, France;5. Impacts and Astromaterials Research Centre, Department of Mineralogy, The Natural History Museum, , London, SW7 5BD UK;6. Institut Universitaire de France, Maison des Universités, , 75005 Paris, France
Abstract:We report trace element analyses by laser ablation inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (LA‐ICP‐MS) of metal grains from nine different CR chondrites, distinguishing grains from chondrule interior (“interior grains”), chondrule surficial shells (“margin grains”), and the matrix (“isolated grains”). Save for a few anomalous grains, Ni‐normalized trace element patterns are similar for all three petrographic settings, with largely unfractionated refractory siderophile elements and depleted volatile Au, Cu, Ag, S. All three types of grains are interpreted to derive from a common precursor approximated by the least‐melted, fine‐grained objects in CR chondrites. This also excludes recondensation of metal vapor as the origin of the bulk of margin grains. The metal precursors were presumably formed by incomplete condensation, with evidence for high‐temperature isolation of refractory platinum‐group‐element (PGE)‐rich condensates before mixing with lower temperature PGE‐depleted condensates. The rounded shape of the Ni‐rich, interior grains shows that they were molten and that they equilibrated with silicates upon slow cooling (1–100 K h?1), largely by oxidation/evaporation of Fe, hence their high Pd content, for example. We propose that Ni‐poorer, amoeboid margin grains, often included in the pyroxene‐rich periphery common to type I chondrules, result from less intense processing of a rim accreted onto the chondrule subsequent to the melting event recorded by the interior grains. This means either that there were two separate heating events, which formed olivine/interior grains and pyroxene/margin grains, respectively, between which dust was accreted around the chondrule, or that there was a single high‐temperature event, of which the chondrule margin records a late “quenching phase,” in which case dust accreted onto chondrules while they were molten. In the latter case, high dust concentrations in the chondrule‐forming region (at least three orders of magnitude above minimum mass solar nebula models) are indicated.
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