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The condensation and fractionation of refractory lithophile elements
Authors:John W. Larimer
Affiliation:Department of Geology and Center for Meteorite Studies, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona 85281, USA
Abstract:It has long been recognized that Cr, Mg, and Si are fractionated in chondritic material along with, but to a much lesser extent than, a large group of more refractory elements. Reasoning that this might imply some unique distribution at the time of fractionation, the patterns have been reexamined. It now appears as if two distinct fractionation patterns can be resolved: one involving ordinary and enstatite chondrites and the other involving carbonaceous chondrites, the Earth, the Moon, and the eucrite parent body. Significantly, the two trends inevitably intersect at C1 composition. Ordinary and enstatite chondrites appear to have evolved from C1 composition via the removal of about 40 and 56% of a high-temperature condensate. Another high-temperature condensate, with a distinctly different composition, appears to be enriched in the carbonaceous chondrites, the Moon, and possibly the Earth, but depleted in the eucrite parent body. The compositions of these two components are constrained to fall on the appropriate mixing lines. These lines intersect the condensation path at two points, one where Mg2SiO4 has just begun to condense (~20%) and a second where Mg2SiO4 was almost completely condensed (~90%). This represents about an 80° temperature difference. But it is within this range that the largest fraction of planetary matter (Mg, Si, and Fe) condenses. Conceivably the relatively sudden appearance of large amounts of condensed material is in some way related to the fractionation process, although the exact relationship cannot be specified.
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