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Petrology and Geochemistry of D'Orbigny, Geochemistry of Sahara 99555, and the Origin of AngritesWe have done detailed petrologic study of the angrite, D'Orbigny, and geochemical study of it and Sahara 99555. D'Orbigny is an igneous-textured rock composed of Ca-rich olivine, Al-Ti-diopside-hedenbergite, subcalcic kirschsteinite, two generations of hercynitic spinel and anorthite, with the mesostasis phases ulv6spinel, Ca-phosphate, a silicophosphate phase and Fe-sulfide. We report an unknown Fe-Ca-Al-Ti-silicate phase in the mesostasis not previously found in angrites. One hercynitic spinel is a large, rounded homogeneous grain of a different composition than the euhedral and zoned grains. We believe the former is a xenocryst, the first such described from angrites. The mafic phases are highly zoned; mg# of cores for olivine are approx.64, and for clinopyroxene approx.58, and both are zoned to Mg-free rims. The Ca content of olivine increases with decreasing mg#, until olivine with approx.20 mole% Ca is overgrown by subcalcic kirschsteinite with Ca approx.30-35 mole%. Detailed zoning sequences in olivine-subcalcic kirschsteinite and clinopyroxene show slight compositional reversals. There is no mineralogic control that can explain these reversals, and we believe they were likely caused by local additions of more primitive melt during crystallization of D'Orbigny. D'Orbigny is the most ferroan angrite with a bulk rock mg# of 32. Compositionally, it is virtually identical to Sahara 99555; the first set of compositionally identical angrites. Comparison with the other angrites shows that there is no simple petrogenetic sequence, partial melting with or without fractional crystallization, that can explain the angrite suite. Angra dos Reis remains a very anomalous angrite. Angrites show no evidence for the brecciation, shock, or impact or thermal metamorphism that affected the HED suite and ordinary chondrites. This suggests the angrite parent body may have followed a fundamentally different evolutionary path than did these other parent bodies.
Document ID
20100029836
Acquisition Source
Johnson Space Center
Document Type
Preprint (Draft being sent to journal)
Authors
Mittlefehldt, David W.
(NASA Johnson Space Center Houston, TX, United States)
Killgore, Marvin
(Southwest Meteorite Lab. Payson, AZ, United States)
Lee, Michael T.
(Hernandez Engineering, Inc. Houston, TX, United States)
Date Acquired
August 25, 2013
Publication Date
May 1, 2001
Subject Category
Geophysics
Report/Patent Number
JSC-CN-6922
Report Number: JSC-CN-6922
Funding Number(s)
PROJECT: RTOP 344-31-00-05
PROJECT: RTOP 152-13-40-21
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Public Use Permitted.
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