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Mineralogy of Pyroxene and Olivine in the Almahata Sitta UreiliteThe Almahata Sitta meteorite (hereafter "Alma") is the first example of a recovered asteroidal sample that fell to earth after detection still in the orbit (2008TC3 asteroid), and thus is critical to understand the relationship between meteorites and their asteroidal parent bodies [1]. Alma is a polymict ureilite showing a fine-grained brecciated texture with variable lithologies from black, porous to denser, white stones [1]. It is an anomalous ureilite because of wide compositional ranges of silicates with abundant pores often coated by vapor-deposit crystals [1]. Nevertheless, Alma has general similarities to all ureilites because of reduction textures of silicates suggestive of rapid cooling from high temperature as well as heterogeneous oxygen isotope compositions [e.g., 1-5]. Alma is especially unique because it spans the compositional range of known ureilites [1]. In this abstract we report detailed mineralogical and crystallographic investigations of two different fragments to further constrain its thermal history with regards to the nature of the ureilite parent body.
Document ID
20100006948
Acquisition Source
Johnson Space Center
Document Type
Extended Abstract
Authors
Mikouchi, T.
(Tokyo Univ. of Agriculture and Technology Japan)
Zolensky, M.
(NASA Johnson Space Center Houston, TX, United States)
Takeda, H.
(Tokyo Univ. of Agriculture and Technology Japan)
Hagiya, K.
(Hyogo Univ. Hyogo, Japan)
Ohsumi, K
(Japan Synchrotron Research Inst. Hyogo, Japan)
Satake, W.
(Tokyo Univ. of Agriculture and Technology Japan)
Kurihara, T.
(Tokyo Univ. of Agriculture and Technology Japan)
Dept. of Physics
(Khartoum Univ. Sudan)
Shaddad, M. H.
Date Acquired
August 25, 2013
Publication Date
March 1, 2010
Subject Category
Geophysics
Report/Patent Number
JSC-CN-19584
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Public Use Permitted.
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