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A Comparison of Metallographic Cooling Rate Methods Used in MeteoritesThe primary objective of this study was to test the postulate that cooling rates acquired from metal grains in chondrites are consistent with those from iron meteorites. Both types of metal occur in some Group IAB meteorites, which are mixtures of massive metal with well-developed Widmanstatten structures and chondritic inclusions with dispersed metal grains. The grains have textures and compositions similar to chondritic metal, including negligible P. The meteorites studied show little or no sign of shock reheating and textural evidence indicates that silicates and metal were mixed before Widmanstatten patterns formed during cooling. Cooling rates were obtained by comparing measured to modeled taenite grain or lamellae dimensions and central Ni contents. Modeling entails solving diffusion equations using experimental diffusion coefficients, phase relations, and bulk or local Ni and P contents, taking into account geometry, undercooling, and impingement. There is one set of parameters for grains and another, quite different set for Widmanstatten lamellae, including a factor of 30 difference in diffusion coefficients. Yet cooling rates obtained from Widmanstatten structures and metal grains in chondritic inclusions of the same meteorite are consistent; uncertainties in the best data are +/- 10 K/Ma, equivalent to a factor of 1 +/- 0.25. This agreement implies that the data and models are correct or contain fortuitously offsetting errors, which is quite unlikely. Cooling rates range from 40 K/Ma to 70 K/Ma in IAB meteorites that contain both grains and Widmanstatten structures. Rates based on grains in Ni-poor and Ni-rich meteorites lacking Widmansatten patterns expand the range from 30 K/Ma to perhaps 200 K/Ma. Cooling rates correlate with Ni content; Ni-poor meteorites have slower rates than Ni-rich ones. Evidently, IAB meteorites were radially distributed over greater than 30km in a body with a radius less than 50km. A comparison of the available Ar ages with cooling times inferred from the cooling rates suggests that the parent body cooled more slowly after the metallographic cooling rates were established.
Document ID
19970015597
Acquisition Source
Headquarters
Document Type
Reprint (Version printed in journal)
Authors
Herpfer, Marc A.
(Arizona State Univ. Tempe, AZ United States)
Larimer, John W.
(Arizona State Univ. Tempe, AZ United States)
Goldstein, J. I.
(Lehigh Univ. Bethlehem, PA United States)
Date Acquired
August 17, 2013
Publication Date
January 1, 1994
Publication Information
Publication: Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta
Publisher: Elsevier Science Ltd.
Volume: 58
Issue: 4
ISSN: 0016-7037
Subject Category
Astrophysics
Report/Patent Number
NAS 1.26:203724
NASA-CR-203724
Accession Number
97N71427
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: NAGw-2273
CONTRACT_GRANT: NSF EAR-84-08163
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Public Use Permitted.
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