4.7 Article

Host rock solid-state transformation in a shock-induced melt vein of Tenham L6 chondrite

Journal

EARTH AND PLANETARY SCIENCE LETTERS
Volume 254, Issue 3-4, Pages 433-445

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.epsl.2006.12.001

Keywords

solid-state transformation; shock metamorphism; Ca-rich majorite; ringwoodite lamellae; growth rate; Tenham

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The host-rock fragments entrained in a 580-mu m-wide melt vein of the Tenham L6 chondrite were investigated using field-emission scanning electron microscopy (FESEM) and transmission electron microscopy (TEM) to better understand the solid-state transformation mechanisms and the shock conditions. The melt vein consists of a matrix of silicate plus metal-sulfide that crystallized from immiscible melts, and sub-rounded host-rock fragments that have been entrained in the melt and transforined to polycrystalline high-pressure silicates by solid-state transformation mechanisms. These high-pressure phases include ringwoodite, low-Ca majorite, clinoenstatite, hollandite-structured plagioclase and Ca-rich majorite. The Ca-rich majorite occurs as a symplectitic intergrowth with a Ca-poor amorphous silicate phase in a 200 mu m-diameter chondrule in the vein. This intergrowth seems to be the result of a disproportionate breakdown of a Ca-rich clinopyroxene precursor into Ca-rich majorite and (FeMg)SiO3 perovskite, which subsequently vitrified upon pressure release. The TEM observations suggest that most solid-state transformations in the Tenham are reconstructive. The transformation of olivine to polycrystalline ringwoodite appears to involve incoherent intracrystalline nucleation and interface-controlled growth. Lamellae in partially transformed olivine are not continuous coherent lamellae, but rather lamellae of polycrystalline ringwoodite, which is inconsistent with a coherent lamellar transformation mechanism. Growth rate calculations based on published kinetic data suggest that the time required to grow I gm ringwoodite crystal is similar to 100 ms at 1600 K, suggesting that the minimum shock pulse of approximately 100 ms. (c) 2006 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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