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1.
Science ; 379(6630): 372-376, 2023 Jan 27.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36701465

RESUMO

Meteorites record processes that occurred before and during the formation of the Solar System in the form of nucleosynthetic anomalies: isotopic compositions that differ from the Solar System patterns. Nucleosynthetic anomalies are rarely seen in volatile elements such as potassium at bulk meteorite scale. We measured potassium isotope ratios in 32 meteorites and identified nucleosynthetic anomalies in the isotope potassium-40. The anomalies are larger and more variable in carbonaceous chondrite (CC) meteorites than in noncarbonaceous (NC) meteorites, indicating that CCs inherited more material produced in supernova nucleosynthesis. The potassium-40 anomaly of Earth is close to that of the NCs, implying that Earth's potassium was mostly delivered by NCs.

2.
Geochim Cosmochim Acta ; 301: 70-90, 2021 May 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34316079

RESUMO

A close relationship between CM and CO chondrites has been suggested by previous petrologic and isotopic studies, leading to the suggestion that they may originate from similar precursor materials or even a common parent body. In this study, we evaluate the genetic relationship between CM and CO chondrites using Ti, Cr, and O isotopes. We first provide additional constraints on the ranges of ε50Ti and ε54Cr values of bulk CM and CO chondrites by reporting the isotopic compositions of CM2 chondrites Murchison, Murray, and Aguas Zarcas and the CO3.8 chondrite Isna. We then report the ε50Ti and ε54Cr values for several ungrouped and anomalous carbonaceous chondrites that have been previously reported to exhibit similarities to the CM and/or CO chondrite groups, including Elephant Moraine (EET) 83226, EET 83355, Grosvenor Mountains (GRO) 95566, MacAlpine Hills (MAC) 87300, MAC 87301, MAC 88107, and Northwest Africa (NWA) 5958, and the O-isotope compositions of a subset of these samples. We additionally report the Ti, Cr, and O isotopic compositions of additional ungrouped chondrites LaPaz Ice Field (LAP) 04757, LAP 04773, Lewis Cliff (LEW) 85332, and Coolidge to assess their potential relationships with known carbonaceous and ordinary chondrite groups. LAP 04757 and LAP 04773 exhibit isotopic compositions indicating they are low-FeO ordinary chondrites. The isotopic compositions of Murchison, Murray, Aguas Zarcas, and Isna extend the compositional ranges defined by the CM and CO chondrites in ε50Ti versus ε54Cr space. The majority of the ungrouped carbonaceous chondrites with documented similarities to the CM and/or CO chondrites plot outside the CM and CO group fields in plots of ε50Ti versus ε54Cr, Δ17O versus ε50Ti, and Δ17O versus ε54Cr. Therefore, based on differences in their Ti, Cr, and O isotopic compositions, we conclude that the CM, CO, and ungrouped carbonaceous chondrites likely represent samples of multiple distinct parent bodies. We also infer that these parent bodies formed from precursor materials that shared similar isotopic compositions, which may indicate formation in regions of the protoplanetary disk that were in close proximity to each other.

3.
Geochim Cosmochim Acta ; 263: 13-30, 2019 Oct 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33414563

RESUMO

Calcium-aluminum-rich inclusions (CAIs) are the first solids to form in the early Solar System, and they exhibit nucleosynthetic anomalies in many isotope systems. The overwhelming majority of isotopic data for CAIs has been limited to inclusions from the CV chondrite Allende and a select few other CV, CO, CM, and ordinary chondrites. It is therefore important to ascertain whether previously reported values for CAIs are representative of the broader CAI-forming region and to make a more rigorous assessment of the extent and implications of isotopic heterogeneity in the early Solar System. Here, we report the mass-independent Ti isotopic compositions of a suite of 23 CAIs of diverse petrologic and geochemical types, including 11 from Allende and 12 from seven other CV3 and CK3 chondrites; the data for CAIs from CK chondrites represent the first reported measurements of Ti isotope compositions of refractory inclusions from this meteorite class. The resolved variation in the mass-independent Ti isotopic compositions of these CAIs indicates that the CAI-forming region of the early Solar System preserved isotopic variability at their time of formation. Nevertheless, the range of Ti isotope compositions reported here for CAIs from CV and CK chondrites falls within the range observed in previously analyzed CAIs from CV, CO, CM, and ordinary chondrites. This implies that CAIs from CV, CK, CO, CM, and ordinary chondrites originated from a common nebular source reservoir characterized by mass-independent isotopic variability in Ti (and other select elements). We further interpret these data to indicate that the Ti isotope anomalies in CAIs represent the isotopic signatures of supernova components in presolar grains that were incorporated into the Solar System in an initially poorly mixed reservoir that was progressively homogenized over time. We conclude that the differing degrees of isotopic variability observed for different elements in normal CAIs are the result of distinct carrier phases and that these CAIs were likely formed towards the final stages of homogenization of the large-scale isotopic heterogeneity that initially existed in the solar nebula.

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