NASA Logo

NTRS

NTRS - NASA Technical Reports Server

Back to Results
Early Archean spherule beds of possible impact origin from Barberton, South Africa: A detailed mineralogical and geochemical studyThe Barberton Greenstone belt is a 3.5- to 3.2-Ga-old formation situated in the Swaziland Supergroup near Barberton, northeast Transvaal, South Africa. The belt includes a lower, predominantly volcanic sequence, and an upper sedimentary sequence (e.g., the Fig Tree Group). Within this upper sedimentary sequence, Lowe and Byerly identified a series of different beds of spherules with diameters of around 0.5-2 mm. Lowe and Byerly and Lowe et al. have interpreted these spherules to be condensates of rock vapor produced by large meteorite impacts in the early Archean. We have collected a series of samples from drill cores from the Mt. Morgan and Princeton sections near Barberton, as well as samples taken from underground exposures in the Sheba and Agnes mines. These samples seem much better preserved than the surface samples described by Lowe and Byerly and Lowe et al. Over a scale of just under 30 cm, several well-defined spherule beds are visible, interspaced with shales and/or layers of banded iron formation. Some spherules have clearly been deposited on top of a sedimentary unit because the shale layer shows indentions from the overlying spherules. Although fresher than the surface samples (e.g., spherule bed S-2), there is abundant evidence for extensive alteration, presumably by hydrothermal processes. In some sections of the cores sulfide mineralization is common. For our mineralogical and petrographical studies we have prepared detailed thin sections of all core and underground samples (as well as some surface samples from the S-2 layer for comparison). For geochemical work, layers with thicknesses in the order of 1-5 mm were separated from selected core and underground samples. The chemical analyses are being performed using neutron activation analysis in order to obtain data for about 35 trace elements in each sample. Major elements are being determined by XRF and plasma spectrometry. To clarify the history of the sulfide mineralization, sulfur isotopic compositions are being determined.
Document ID
19930000967
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Koeberl, Christian
(Wien Univ. Austria)
Reimold, Wolf Uwe
(Witwatersrand Univ. Johannesburg, South Africa)
Boer, Rudolf H.
(Witwatersrand Univ. Johannesburg, South Africa)
Date Acquired
September 6, 2013
Publication Date
January 1, 1992
Publication Information
Publication: Lunar and Planetary Inst., International Conference on Large Meteorite Impacts and Planetary Evolution
Subject Category
Astrophysics
Accession Number
93N10155
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
No Preview Available