Variability in Abundances of Meteorites in the Ordovician
Abstract
The knowledge of the flux of extraterrestrial material throughout Earth's history is of great interest to reconstruct the collisional evolution of the asteroid belt. Here, we present a review of our investigations of the nature of the meteorite flux to Earth in the Ordovician, one of the best-studied time periods for extraterrestrial matter in the geological record [1]. We base our studies on compositions of extraterrestrial chromite and chrome-spinel extracted by acid dissolution from condensed marine limestone from Sweden and Russia [1-3]. By analyzing major and minor elements with EDS and WDS, and three oxygen isotopes with SIMS we classify the recovered meteoritic materials. Today, the L and H chondrites dominate the meteorite and coarse micrometeorite flux. Together with the rarer LL chondrites they have a type abundance of 80%. In the Ordovician it was very different: starting from 466 Ma ago 99% of the flux was comprised of L chondrites [2]. This was a result of the collisional breakup of the parent asteroid. This event occurred close to an orbital resonance in the asteroid belt and showered Earth with >100x more L chondritic material than today during more than 1 Ma. Although the flux is much lower at present, L chondrites are still the dominant type of meteorites that fall today. Before the asteroid breakup event 467 Ma ago the three groups of ordinary chondrites had about similar abundances. Surprisingly, they were possibly surpassed in abundance by achondrites, materials from partially and fully differentiated asteroids [3]. These achondrites include HED meteorites, which are presumably fragments released during the formation of the Rheasilvia impact structure 1 Ga ago on asteroid 4 Vesta. The enhanced abundance of LL chondrites is possibly a result of the Flora asteroid family forming event at 1 Ga ago. The higher abundance of primitive achondrites was likely due to smaller asteroid family forming events that have not been identified yet but that did not generate a supply of fragments that was long-lived enough to be still important today. Our results imply that the composition of the flux of meteorites to Earth is biased by discrete collisional events in the asteroid belt. [1] Schmitz B (2013) Chem Erde 73, 117; [2] Heck PR et al (2016) GCA 177, 120; [3] Heck PR et al (2017) Nat Astron 1, 35, DOI: 10.1038/s41550-016-0035.
- Publication:
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AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts
- Pub Date:
- December 2017
- Bibcode:
- 2017AGUFMEP11B1556H
- Keywords:
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- 1039 Alteration and weathering processes;
- GEOCHEMISTRY;
- 2129 Interplanetary dust;
- INTERPLANETARY PHYSICS;
- 6205 Asteroids;
- PLANETARY SCIENCES: SOLAR SYSTEM OBJECTS;
- 6240 Meteorites and tektites;
- PLANETARY SCIENCES: SOLAR SYSTEM OBJECTS