Cosmic-ray exposure age and preatmospheric size of the Bunburra Rockhole achondrite

Bunburra Rockhole is the first meteorite fall photographed and recovered by the Desert Fireball Network in Australia. It is classified as an ungrouped achondrite similar in mineralogical and chemical composition to eucrites, but it has a distinct oxygen isotope composition. The question is if achond...

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Main Authors: Welten, K., Meier, M., Caffee, M., Laubenstein, M., Nishizumi, K., Wieler, R., Bland, Philip, Towner, M., Spurný, P.
Format: Journal Article
Published: John Wiley & Sons, Inc. 2012
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/5613
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author Welten, K.
Meier, M.
Caffee, M.
Laubenstein, M.
Nishizumi, K.
Wieler, R.
Bland, Philip
Towner, M.
Spurný, P.
author_facet Welten, K.
Meier, M.
Caffee, M.
Laubenstein, M.
Nishizumi, K.
Wieler, R.
Bland, Philip
Towner, M.
Spurný, P.
author_sort Welten, K.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Bunburra Rockhole is the first meteorite fall photographed and recovered by the Desert Fireball Network in Australia. It is classified as an ungrouped achondrite similar in mineralogical and chemical composition to eucrites, but it has a distinct oxygen isotope composition. The question is if achondrites like Bunburra Rockhole originate from the same parent body as the howardite-eucrite-diogenite (HED) meteorites or from several separate, differentiated parent bodies. To address this question, we measured cosmogenic radionuclides and noble gases in the Bunburra Rockhole achondrite. The short-lived radionuclides 22Na and 54Mn confirm that Bunburra Rockhole is a recent fall. The concentrations of 10Be, 26Al and 36Cl as well as the 22Ne/21Ne ratio indicate that Bunburra Rockhole was a relatively small object (R approximately 15 cm) in space, consistent with the photographic fireball observations. The cosmogenic 38Ar concentration yields a cosmic-ray exposure (CRE) age of 22 ± 3 Myr, whereas 21Ne and 3He yield approximately 30% and approximately 60% lower ages, respectively, due to loss of cosmogenic He and Ne, mainly from plagioclase. With a CRE age of 22 Myr, Bunburra Rockhole is the first anomalous eucrite that overlaps with the main CRE peak of the HED meteorites. The radiogenic K-Ar age of 4.1 Gyr is consistent with the U-Pb age, while the young U,Th-He age of approximately 1.4 Gyr indicates that Bunburra Rockhole lost radiogenic 4He more recently.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-56132017-09-13T16:06:25Z Cosmic-ray exposure age and preatmospheric size of the Bunburra Rockhole achondrite Welten, K. Meier, M. Caffee, M. Laubenstein, M. Nishizumi, K. Wieler, R. Bland, Philip Towner, M. Spurný, P. Bunburra Rockhole is the first meteorite fall photographed and recovered by the Desert Fireball Network in Australia. It is classified as an ungrouped achondrite similar in mineralogical and chemical composition to eucrites, but it has a distinct oxygen isotope composition. The question is if achondrites like Bunburra Rockhole originate from the same parent body as the howardite-eucrite-diogenite (HED) meteorites or from several separate, differentiated parent bodies. To address this question, we measured cosmogenic radionuclides and noble gases in the Bunburra Rockhole achondrite. The short-lived radionuclides 22Na and 54Mn confirm that Bunburra Rockhole is a recent fall. The concentrations of 10Be, 26Al and 36Cl as well as the 22Ne/21Ne ratio indicate that Bunburra Rockhole was a relatively small object (R approximately 15 cm) in space, consistent with the photographic fireball observations. The cosmogenic 38Ar concentration yields a cosmic-ray exposure (CRE) age of 22 ± 3 Myr, whereas 21Ne and 3He yield approximately 30% and approximately 60% lower ages, respectively, due to loss of cosmogenic He and Ne, mainly from plagioclase. With a CRE age of 22 Myr, Bunburra Rockhole is the first anomalous eucrite that overlaps with the main CRE peak of the HED meteorites. The radiogenic K-Ar age of 4.1 Gyr is consistent with the U-Pb age, while the young U,Th-He age of approximately 1.4 Gyr indicates that Bunburra Rockhole lost radiogenic 4He more recently. 2012 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/5613 10.1111/j.1945-5100.2011.01262.x John Wiley & Sons, Inc. unknown
spellingShingle Welten, K.
Meier, M.
Caffee, M.
Laubenstein, M.
Nishizumi, K.
Wieler, R.
Bland, Philip
Towner, M.
Spurný, P.
Cosmic-ray exposure age and preatmospheric size of the Bunburra Rockhole achondrite
title Cosmic-ray exposure age and preatmospheric size of the Bunburra Rockhole achondrite
title_full Cosmic-ray exposure age and preatmospheric size of the Bunburra Rockhole achondrite
title_fullStr Cosmic-ray exposure age and preatmospheric size of the Bunburra Rockhole achondrite
title_full_unstemmed Cosmic-ray exposure age and preatmospheric size of the Bunburra Rockhole achondrite
title_short Cosmic-ray exposure age and preatmospheric size of the Bunburra Rockhole achondrite
title_sort cosmic-ray exposure age and preatmospheric size of the bunburra rockhole achondrite
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/5613