SNC meteorites - Igneous rocks from MarsIt is argued that SNC (shergottite, nakhlite, chassignite) meteorites are ejecta from Mars. The mineralogy and chemistry of these objects is discussed, including rare earth element content, potassium/uranium ratios, oxidation state, oxygen isotopes, ages and isotopic evolution, magnetism, shock and texture. The possibility of SNC's deriving from Mercury, Venus, earth, moon, or a eucrite parent body is argued against. Mercury is too volatile-poor and anhydrous, Venus's atmosphere too thick and hot and its gravitational field too large, earth's oxygen isotope content too different from that of SNC's, the moon too different isotopically and chemically, and the ages of eucrites too different. Models suggest that SNC's could have escaped from Mars's gravitational field, and their composition supports Martian origin. Statistically, they could have reached the earth within their measured shock ages. Objections to the hypothesis are also discussed.
Document ID
19820048233
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Conference Proceedings
Authors
Wood, C. A. (NASA Johnson Space Center Geology Branch, Houston, TX, United States)
Ashwal, L. D. (Lunar and Planetary Institute Houston, TX, United States)