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K-Ar ages of meteorites: Clues to parent-body thermal histories

期刊

CHEMIE DER ERDE-GEOCHEMISTRY
卷 71, 期 3, 页码 207-226

出版社

ELSEVIER GMBH
DOI: 10.1016/j.chemer.2011.03.001

关键词

Ar-Ar ages; Meteorites; Thermal histories; Impacts; Metamorphism

资金

  1. Lunar and Planetary Institute
  2. NASA

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Whereas most radiometric chronometers give formation ages of individual meteorites >4.5 Ga ago, the K-Ar chronometer rarely gives times of meteorite formation. Instead, K-Ar ages obtained by the 39Ar-40Ar technique span the entire age of the solar system and typically measure the diverse thermal histories of meteorites or their parent objects, as produced by internal parent body metamorphism or impact heating. This paper briefly explains the Ar-Ar dating technique. It then reviews Ar-Ar ages of several different types of meteorites, representing at least 16 different parent bodies, and discusses the likely thermal histories these ages represent. Ar-Ar ages of ordinary (H, L, and LL) chondrites, R chondrites, and enstatite meteorites yield cooling times following internal parent body metamorphism extending over similar to 200 Ma after parent body formation, consistent with parent bodies of 100 km diameter. For a suite of H-chondrites, Ar-Ar and U-Pb ages anti-correlate with the degree of metamorphism, consistent with increasing metamorphic temperatures and longer cooling times at greater depths within the parent body. In contrast, acapulcoites-lodranites, although metamorphosed to higher temperatures than chondrites, give Ar-Ar ages which cluster tightly at similar to 4.51 Ga. Ar-Ar ages of silicate from IAB iron meteorites give a continual distribution across similar to 4.53-4.32 Ga, whereas silicate from IIE iron meteorites give Ar-Ar ages of either similar to 4.5 Ga or similar to 3.7 Ga. Both of these parent bodies suffered early, intense collisional heating and mixing. Comparison of Ar-Ar and I-Xe ages for silicate from three other iron meteorites also suggests very early col collisional heating and mixing. Most mesosiderites show Ar-Ar ages of similar to 3.9 Ga, and their significantly sloped age spectra and Ar diffusion properties, as well as Ni diffusion profiles in metal, indicate very deep burial after collisional mixing and cooling at a very slow rate of similar to 0.2 degrees C/Ma. Ar-Ar ages of a large number of brecciated eucrites range over similar to 3.4-4.1 Ga, similar to ages of many lunar highland rocks. These ages on both bodies were reset by large impact heating events, possibly initiated by movements of the giant planets. Many impact-heated chondrites show impact-reset Ar-Ar ages of either >3.5 Ga or <1.0 Ga, and generally only chondrites show these younger ages. The younger ages may represent orbital evolution times in the asteroid belt prior to ejection into Earth-crossing orbits. Among martian meteorites, Ar-Ar ages of nakhlites are similar to ages obtained from other radiometric chronometers, but apparent Ar-Ar ages of younger shergottites are almost always older than igneous crystallization ages, because of the presence of excess (parentless) 40Ar. This excess 40Ar derives from shock-implanted martian atmosphere or from radiogenic 40Ar inherited from the melt. Differences between meteorite ages obtained from other chronometers (e.g., I-Xe and U-Pb) and the oldest measured Ar-Ar ages are consistent with previous suggestions that the K-40 decay parameters in common use are incorrect and that the K-Ar age of a 4500 Ma meteorite should be possibly increased, but by no more than similar to 20 Ma. (C) 2011 Elsevier GmbH. All rights reserved.

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