Project Details
Description
The abundances and isotopic composition of hydrogen and other volatiles in CAIs and chondrule glasses & minerals can potentially provide information on the immediate environment surrounding their formation, including the vapor pressure of various volatiles in environments ranging from the proto-solar nebula to impacts to post-accretion interactions with ices and H2O-rich fluids during the processes of parent body assembly, heating & metamorphism. In the inner solar system, end member volatile sources include the solar nebula gas and low-temperature water ice; these two sources have D/H ratios that differ by orders of magnitude, and are also characterized by very different oxygen isotope compositions. Additionally, coupled data on hydration and oxygen isotope composition of CAIs and chondrules can provide important information that can potentially identify open-system behavior in phases that are used for Al-Mg, Pb-Pb, Sm-Nd and Hf-W chronometry.
Objectives: We will examine CAIs and chondrules in the most primitive CO, CM, CR and CV carbonaceous chondrites of lowest metamorphic and aqueously altered petrologic types, to determine if they (A) preserve evidence for volatiles incorporated from the solar nebula, potentially recording the partial pressure of hydrogen during their formation; and (B) record open-system behavior for H and O. Nebular signatures can be overprinted by later interactions with low-temperature, H2O-rich fluids in chondrite parent bodies, accompanied by hydration and formation of molecular H2O in glass that is far in excess of the H2O/OH ratio typical of quenched high-temperature melts (cf. Stolper, 1982). This excess molecular H2O is readily observed by FTIR, so much so that it has formed the foundation of a crude dating method for obsidian stone tools in archaeology (Stevenson, 1993; Liritzis, 2006). We will use SIMS and FTIR methods to focus on documenting the relationship between concentrations and isotopic compositions of hydrogen and oxygen
Status | Finished |
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Effective start/end date | 3/6/18 → 3/5/22 |
Funding
- Carnegie Institution of Washington (10829-1255 AMD 3 // 80NSSC18K604)
- National Aeronautics and Space Administration (10829-1255 AMD 3 // 80NSSC18K604)
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