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31.
Determinations of 40Ar39Ar ages are reported for seven severely shock-heated chondrites. Shaw gives a plateau age of 4.29 Gyr. Louisville, Farmington, and Wickenburg give well-defined intercept ages of 0.5–0.6 Gyr. Orvinio, Arapahoe, and Lubbock show complex 40Ar39Ar release curves, with age minima of 0.7–1.0 Gyr. Degassing times of 0.5–1.0 Gyr are suggested for these meteorites. Most severely shocked chondrites were apparently not totally degassed of 40Ar by the event, but retained from ~ 2 to ~45% of their 40Ar. When calculated values of the diffusion parameter, Da2, for Ar are examined in Arrhenius plots, they show two distinct linear relationships, which apparently correspond to the degassing of different mineral phases with distinct KCa ratios and different average temperatures for Ar release. The experimentally determined values of Da2 for the high temperature phase of several severely shocked chondrites are ~10?7 to 10?5sec?1 for their determined shock-heating temperatures of ~950°C to ~ 1200°C. The inferred reheating temperatures, Da2 values, and fraction of 40Ar loss during the reheating event for these seven chondrites suggest post-shock cooling rates and burial depth of ~ 10?2 10?4°C/sec and ~0.5–2m, respectively. For three chondrites these cooling rates agree with those determined from Ni diffusion in metal grains: for five chondrites the cooling rates derived from 40Ar and Ni disagree by a factor of ~105. It is suggested that five of these severely shocked chondrites were part of large ejecta blankets containing hot material and cold clasts with a distribution of sizes and that the cooling rate of this ejecta appreciably decreased as a function of time.  相似文献   
32.
The concentrations of noble gas isotopes of He, Ne and Ar have been measured in eight mineral separates of the Bruderheim chondrite. The cosmic-ray-produced nuclides 21Ne and 38Ar were correlated by a computer least-squares fitting program with the elemental composition in each separate of potential targets for nuclear production yielding the following production equations: [21Ne, 10?8 cm3/g] = k(0.45[Mg] + 0.085[Si] + 0.060[S] + 0.017[Ca] + 0.0044[Fe + Ni]); [38Ar, 10?8 cm3/g] = k(2.6[K] + 0.37[Ca] + 0.08[Ti + Cr + Mn] + 0.021[Fe + Ni]) with elemental concentrations in weight per cent and k equal to the reciprocal of the cosmic-ray exposure age of Bruderheim. The P(S)/P(Cr + Mn + Fe + Ni) weight production ratio for 3He was determined to be 1.53; relative productions of 3He from O, Mg and Si and 21Ne from Al proved to be incalculable.  相似文献   
33.
Abundances and isotopic compositions of all the stable noble gases have been measured in 19 different depths of the Apollo 15 deep drill core, 7 different depths of the Apollo 16 deep drill core, and in several surface fines and breccias. All samples analyzed from both drill cores contain large concentrations of solar wind implanted gases, which demonstrates that even the deepest layers of both cores have experienced a lunar surface history. For the Apollo 15 core samples, trapped4He concentrations are constant to within a factor of two; elemental ratios show even greater similarities with mean values of4He/22Ne= 683±44,22Ne/36Ar= 0.439±0.057,36Ar/84Kr= 1.60±0.11·103, and84Kr/132Xe= 5.92±0.74. Apollo 16 core samples show distinctly lower4He contents,4He/22Ne(567±74), and22Ne/36Ar(0.229±0.024), but their heavy-element ratios are essentially identical to Apollo 15 core samples. Apollo 16 surface fines also show lower values of4He/22Ne and22Ne/36Ar. This phenomenon is attributed to greater fractionation during gas loss because of the higher plagioclase contents of Apollo 16 fines. Of these four elemental ratios as measured in both cores, only the22Ne/36Ar for the Apollo 15 core shows an apparent depth dependance. No unambiguous evidence was seen in these core materials of appreciable variations in the composition of the solar wind. Calculated concentrations of cosmic ray-produced21Ne,80Kr, and126Xe for the Apollo 15 core showed nearly flat (within a factor of two) depth profiles, but with smaller random concentration variations over depths of a few cm. These data are not consistent with a short-term core accretion model from non-irradiated regolith. The Apollo 15 core data are consistent with a combined accretion plus static time of a few hundred million years, and also indicate variable pre-accretion irradiation of core material. The lack of large variations in solar wind gas contents across core layers is also consistent with appreciable pre-accretion irradiation. Depth profiles of cosmogenic gases in the Apollo 16 core show considerably larger concentrations of cosmogenic gases below ~65 cm depth than above. This pattern may be interpreted either as an accretionary process, or by a more recent deposition of regolith to the upper ~70 cm of the core. Cosmogenic gas concentrations of several Apollo 16 fines and breccias are consistent with ages of North Ray Crater and South Ray Crater of ~50·106 and ~2·106 yr, respectively.  相似文献   
34.
We report an 39Ar–40Ar age determination of a whole rock sample of the olivine-rich, martian meteorite Northwest Africa (NWA) 2737. Those extractions releasing 0–48% of the 39Ar define an 39Ar–40Ar isochron age of 160–190 Ma, when evaluated in various ways. Higher temperature extractions show increasing ages that eventually exceed the reported Sm–Nd age of 1.42 Ga. At least part of this excess 40Ar may have been shock implanted from the martian atmosphere. We considered two possible interpretations of the Ar–Ar isochron age, utilizing the measured Ar diffusion characteristics of NWA 2737 and a thermal model, which relates Ar diffusion to the size of a cooling object after shock heating. One interpretation, that 40Ar was only partially degassed by an impact event ~ 11 Ma ago (the CRE age), appears possible only if NWA 2737 was shock-heated to temperatures > 600 °C and was ejected from Mars as an object a few 10 s of cm in diameter. The second interpretation, which we prefer, is that NWA experienced an earlier, more intense shock event, which left it residing in a warm ejecta layer, and a less intense event ~ 11 Ma ago, which ejected it into space. Our evaluation would require NWA 2737 to have been heated by this first event to a temperature of ~ 300–500 °C and buried in ejecta to a depth of ~ 1–20 m. These conclusions are compared to model constraints on meteorite ejection from Mars reported in the literature. The second, Mars-ejection impact ~ 11 Ma ago probably heated NWA 2737 to no more than ~ 400 °C. NWA 2737 demonstrates that some martian meteorites probably experienced shock heating in events that did not eject them into space.  相似文献   
35.
Abstract— We used the nuclear reaction 37Cl (n,γ) 38Ar, achieved during neutron irradiation for dating meteorites by the 39Ar‐40Ar technique, to calculate the elemental Cl concentration of 132 samples of 94 different meteorites (mostly finds) representing several different classes. determined k and ca concentrations are also reported. Total [Cl] varies considerably, both among meteorites of the same class and among different meteorite classes. The range in [Cl] is approximately 15–177 ppm for ordinary chondrites; approximately 24–650 ppm for enstatite chondrites; approximately 4–177 ppm for eucrites; approximately 7–128 ppm for mesosiderites; approximately 35–268 ppm for acapulcoites and lodranites; and approximately 12–507 ppm for winonaites and iron silicates. As expected, most differentiated meteorites have lower [Cl] compared to chondrites and iron silicates. Analyses of 11 interior samples (~0.1 g each) of a large L6 chondrite varied over 68–129 ppm, which is a measure of the homogeneity of Cl distribution. By evaluating Ar release during stepwise sample degassing, we separated the Cl into low‐temperature and high‐temperature components, the former of which may consist of terrestrial contamination. Most samples show low‐temperature Cl concentrations of <40 ppm, but for several samples terrestrial Cl contamination constitutes significant fractions of the total Cl. Among most differentiated meteorites, finds show considerably greater low‐temperature [Cl] compared to falls.  相似文献   
36.
Whereas most radiometric chronometers give formation ages of individual meteorites >4.5 Ga ago, the K–Ar chronometer rarely gives times of meteorite formation. Instead, K–Ar ages obtained by the 39Ar–40Ar technique span the entire age of the solar system and typically measure the diverse thermal histories of meteorites or their parent objects, as produced by internal parent body metamorphism or impact heating. This paper briefly explains the Ar–Ar dating technique. It then reviews Ar–Ar ages of several different types of meteorites, representing at least 16 different parent bodies, and discusses the likely thermal histories these ages represent. Ar–Ar ages of ordinary (H, L, and LL) chondrites, R chondrites, and enstatite meteorites yield cooling times following internal parent body metamorphism extending over ∼200 Ma after parent body formation, consistent with parent bodies of ∼100 km diameter. For a suite of H-chondrites, Ar–Ar and U–Pb ages anti-correlate with the degree of metamorphism, consistent with increasing metamorphic temperatures and longer cooling times at greater depths within the parent body. In contrast, acapulcoites–lodranites, although metamorphosed to higher temperatures than chondrites, give Ar–Ar ages which cluster tightly at ∼4.51 Ga. Ar–Ar ages of silicate from IAB iron meteorites give a continual distribution across ∼4.53–4.32 Ga, whereas silicate from IIE iron meteorites give Ar–Ar ages of either ∼4.5 Ga or ∼3.7 Ga. Both of these parent bodies suffered early, intense collisional heating and mixing. Comparison of Ar–Ar and I–Xe ages for silicate from three other iron meteorites also suggests very early collisional heating and mixing. Most mesosiderites show Ar–Ar ages of ∼3.9 Ga, and their significantly sloped age spectra and Ar diffusion properties, as well as Ni diffusion profiles in metal, indicate very deep burial after collisional mixing and cooling at a very slow rate of ∼0.2 °C/Ma. Ar–Ar ages of a large number of brecciated eucrites range over ∼3.4–4.1 Ga, similar to ages of many lunar highland rocks. These ages on both bodies were reset by large impact heating events, possibly initiated by movements of the giant planets. Many impact-heated chondrites show impact-reset Ar–Ar ages of either >3.5 Ga or <1.0 Ga, and generally only chondrites show these younger ages. The younger ages may represent orbital evolution times in the asteroid belt prior to ejection into Earth-crossing orbits. Among martian meteorites, Ar–Ar ages of nakhlites are similar to ages obtained from other radiometric chronometers, but apparent Ar–Ar ages of younger shergottites are almost always older than igneous crystallization ages, because of the presence of excess (parentless) 40Ar. This excess 40Ar derives from shock-implanted martian atmosphere or from radiogenic 40Ar inherited from the melt. Differences between meteorite ages obtained from other chronometers (e.g., I–Xe and U–Pb) and the oldest measured Ar–Ar ages are consistent with previous suggestions that the 40K decay parameters in common use are incorrect and that the K–Ar age of a 4500 Ma meteorite should be possibly increased, but by no more than ∼20 Ma.  相似文献   
37.
38.
Abstract— Measured Ne isotopes in samples of shergottite ALHA77005 show variations in 21Ne/22Ne ratios and 21Ne abundances that are consistent with the presence of two cosmogenic components: a component produced by nuclear interactions of galactic cosmic rays (GCR) and a component produced at shallow shielding depths (~0–3 cm) by energetic solar flare protons (SCR). We suggest that the 21Ne/22Ne ratio generally can be used to distinguish between SCR and GCR components in many meteorite types. Analysis of cosmogenic Ne produced in chondrite mineral separates, eucrites, and anorthositic lunar rocks, all having diverse major element compositions, indicate that the GCR 21Ne/22Ne ratio increases modestly with relative Mg content. Data for hundreds of chondrite analyses suggest that SCR Ne is present in no more than a very small fraction of chondrites. Examination of literature data for other shergottites, however, indicate that all of these meteorites contain SCR Ne but that it is apparently absent in other SNC meteorites. The ubiquitous presence of SCR Ne in shergottites, in contrast to most other types of meteorites, suggests that the martian origin of shergottites gave them different orbital parameters compared to other meteorites. This in turn may have contributed to slower entry velocities and lesser surface ablation in the atmosphere or even to higher SCR production rates.  相似文献   
39.
The effects of chemical weathering on the Holbrook, Arizona chondrite were studied via major, minor, and trace element analysis along with noble gas measurements. Three samples of Holbrook were studied: a fresh specimen which fell in 1912, a specimen collected in 1931 and a specimen collected in 1968. The weathering of the meteorite produced changes in the Fe and Mg concentrations. The amount of metallic iron decreases with increasing degree of weathering. The MgO content decreases and the total iron content increases slightly with increasing weathering of the specimen, but these concentration differences are not necessarily due to weathering. Elemental concentrations for Ti, Ca, Al, P, Mn, Ni and Cr did not change significantly during weathering. Sodium may have been lost during weathering, whereas K showed a slight enrichment in abundance with terrestrial age. Trace elements C, Rb and Sr increased at least two-fold during weathering of the meteorite. Abundances of the radiogenic and cosmogenic noble gases decreased with increasing terrestrial age. Concentration ratios of certain cosmogenic noble gas nuclides which are commonly used as indicators of gas loss and shielding in chondrites show unpredictable behavior in the weathered chondrite.  相似文献   
40.
The Wethersfield (1982) chondrite was assayed for a suite of cosmogenic radionuclides shortly after fall. Data are reported for 7Be, 22Na, 26Al, 46Sc, 48V, 51Cr, 54Mn, 56Co, 57Co, and 60Co. A comparison is made with predicted results based on a scaling to the Deep River Neutron Monitor. Noble gases were also assayed in a sub-sample. The cosmic ray exposure age is estimated to be 45 million years.  相似文献   
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