4.1 Article

Zinc isotopic composition of iron meteorites: Absence of isotopic anomalies and origin of the volatile element depletion

Journal

METEORITICS & PLANETARY SCIENCE
Volume 48, Issue 12, Pages 2441-2450

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/maps.12229

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NASA Cosmochemistry Fund [NNX12AH70G]
  2. Office of Undergraduate Research at Washington University
  3. Chaire of Excellence from the Sorbonne Paris Cite

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High-precision Zn isotopic compositions measured by MC-ICP-MS are documented for 32 iron meteorites from various fractionally crystallized and silicate-bearing groups. The Zn-66 values range from -0.59 parts per thousand up to +5.61 parts per thousand with most samples being slightly enriched in the heavier isotopes compared with carbonaceous chondrites (0<0.5). The Zn-66 versus Zn-68 plot of all samples defines a common linear fractionation line, which supports the hypothesis that Zn was derived from a single reservoir or from multiple reservoirs linked by mass-dependent fractionation processes. Our data for Redfields fall on a mass fractionation line and therefore refute a previous claim of it having an anomalous isotopic composition due to nonmixing of nucleosynthetic products. The negative correlation between Zn-66 and the Zn concentration of IAB and IIE is consistent with mass-dependent isotopic fractionation due to evaporation with preferential loss of lighter isotopes in the vapor phase. Data for the Zn concentrations and isotopic compositions of two IVA samples demonstrate that volatile depletion in the IVA parent body is not likely the result of evaporation. This is important evidence that favors the incomplete condensation origin for the volatile depletion of the IVA parent body.

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