4.1 Article

Mineralogy, petrography, geochemistry, and classification of the Kosice meteorite

Journal

METEORITICS & PLANETARY SCIENCE
Volume 50, Issue 5, Pages 864-879

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/maps.12405

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Slovak Research and Development Agency [APVV-0516-10, VVCE-0033-07]
  2. VEGA from Ministry of Education, Science, Research and Sport of the Slovak Republic [1/1157/11]
  3. Comenius University [UK/428/2013, UK/537/2013]

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The Kosice meteorite was observed to fall on 28 February 2010 at 23: 25 UT near the city of Kosice in eastern Slovakia and its mineralogy, petrology, and geochemistry are described. The characteristic features of the meteorite fragments are fan-like, mosaic, lamellar, and granular chondrules, which were up to 1.2 mm in diameter. The fusion crust has a black-gray color with a thickness up to 0.6 mm. The matrix of the meteorite is formed mainly by forsterite (Fo(80.6)); diopside; enstatite (Fs(16.7)); albite; troilite; Fe-Ni metals such as iron and taenite; and some augite, chlorapatite, merrillite, chromite, and tetrataenite. Plagioclase-like glass was also identified. Relative uniform chemical composition of basic silicates, partially brecciated textures, as well as skeletal taenite crystals into troilite veinlets suggest monomict breccia formed at conditions of rapid cooling. The Kosice meteorite is classified as ordinary chondrite of the H5 type which has been slightly weathered, and only short veinlets of Fe hydroxides are present. The textural relationships indicate an S3 degree of shock metamorphism and W0 weathering grade. Some fragments of the meteorite Kosice are formed by monomict breccia of the petrological type H5. On the basis of REE content, we suggest the Kosice chondrite is probably from the same parent body as H5 chondrite Moravka from Czech Republic. Electron-microprobe analysis (EMPA) with focused and defocused electron beam, whole-rock analysis (WRA), inductively coupled plasma mass and optical emission spectroscopy (ICP MS, ICP OES), and calibration-free laser induced breakdown spectroscopy (CF-LIBS) were used to characterize the Kosice fragments. The results provide further evidence that whole-rock analysis gives the most accurate analyses, but this method is completely destructive. Two other proposed methods are partially destructive (EMPA) or nondestructive (CF-LIBS), but only major and minor elements can be evaluated due to the significantly lower sample consumption.

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