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Published September 2019 | Supplemental Material + Published
Journal Article Open

A vacancy‐rich, partially inverted spinelloid silicate, (Mg,Fe,Si)_2(Si,□)O_4, as a major matrix phase in shock melt veins of the Tenham and Suizhou L6 chondrites

Abstract

A new high‐pressure silicate, (Mg,Fe,Si)_2(Si,□)O_4 with a tetragonal spinelloid structure, was discovered within shock melt veins in the Tenham and Suizhou meteorites, two highly shocked L6 ordinary chondrites. Relative to ringwoodite, this phase exhibits an inversion of Si coupled with intrinsic vacancies and a consequent reduction of symmetry. Most notably, the spinelloid makes up about 30–40 vol% of the matrix of shock veins with the remainder composed of a vitrified (Mg,Fe)SiO_3 phase (in Tenham) or (Mg,Fe)SiO_3‐rich clinopyroxene (in Suizhou); these phase assemblages constitute the bulk of the matrix in the shock veins. Previous assessments of the melt matrices concluded that majorite and akimotoite were the major phases. Our contrasting result requires revision of inferred conditions during shock melt cooling of the Tenham and Suizhou meteorites, revealing in particular a much higher quench rate (at least 5 × 10^3 K s^(−1)) for veins of 100–500 μm diameter, thus overriding formation of the stable phase assemblage majoritic garnet plus periclase.

Additional Information

© 2019 The Meteoritical Society. Version of Record online: 07 July 2019; Manuscript accepted: 06 June 2019; Manuscript received: 21 December 2018. SEM, EBSD, and EPMA analyses were carried out at the Caltech GPS Division Analytical Facility, which is supported, in part, by NSF Grants EAR‐0318518 and DMR‐0080065. Raman analysis was performed in the Rossman Lab at Caltech. Synchrotron diffraction was carried out at the 13‐IDD beamline of the Advanced Photon Source. Use of the Advanced Photon Source, an Office of Science User Facility operated for the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) Office of Science by Argonne National Laboratory, was supported by the U.S. DOE under contract no. DE‐AC02‐06CH11357. Suizhou section SCM1 was provided to C. M. by Prof. Renjing Wang at China University of Geosciences (Wuhan). We thank Axel Wittmann and AE Wolf Uwe Reimold for their constructive reviews.

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Published - Ma_et_al-2019-Meteoritics___Planetary_Science.pdf

Supplemental Material - maps13349-sup-0004-supinfo.docx

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August 19, 2023
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