Title of article :
The collisional history of the HED parent body inferred from 40Ar39Ar ages of eucrites
Author/Authors :
Kunz، نويسنده , , Joachim and Trieloff، نويسنده , , Mario and Dieter Bobe، نويسنده , , Klaus and Metzler-Nolte، نويسنده , , Knut and Stِffler، نويسنده , , Dieter and Jessberger، نويسنده , , Elmar K، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1995
Abstract :
In the framework of a consortium studying small solar system bodies we analysed matrix samples and individual clasts from five eucrites—Stannern, Pasamonte, ALHA-76005, ALHA-78132 and ALHA-80102—by high resolution stepwise heating 40Ar39Ar technique. Our aim was to determine the duration of secondary processes like brecciation and recrystallization caused by collisional events, which were accompanied by rather weak reheating and thus by rather small effects on the KAr system. For this reason all age spectra are complex. The apparent ages increase with increasing degassing temperatures and, in some cases, are additionally disturbed by 39Ar recoil. Thus, the low temperature ages provide estimates of the time of the last thermal disturbing event while the high temperature ages give lower limits for the last total degassing of the rocks. Only a granulitic breccia clast from polymict eucrite Pasamonte yields a plateau age of 4.245 ± 0.021 Ga, which probably dates the formation of its equigranular texture. The KCa spectra for all samples are constant for the first 70% of the 39Ar release and then level off by about one order of magnitude.
y, we are not able to prove or dismiss a cataclysmic bombardment of the HED parent body comparable to that of the Earthʹs moon. Nevertheless, a rather short duration of impact metamorphism seems unlikely. Completed by the data from other studies, our results support a period of intense bombardment of the HED parent body totally resetting the KAr system of the rocks ∼ 4.4-3.9 Ga ago. It was followed by a time of less intense impact induced metamorphism causing only partial loss of radiogenic 40Ar ∼ 3.9-2.8 Ga ago.
Journal title :
PLANETARY AND SPACE SCIENCE
Journal title :
PLANETARY AND SPACE SCIENCE