Japan Geoscience Union Meeting 2014

Presentation information

Oral

Symbol P (Space and Planetary Sciences) » P-PS Planetary Sciences

[P-PS25_2AM1] Meteorite anatomy: synthetic analyses of solar system matter

Fri. May 2, 2014 9:00 AM - 10:45 AM 213 (2F)

Convener:*Yusuke Seto(Graduate School of Science, Kobe University), Tomohiro Usui(Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences,Tokyo Institute of Technology), Shoichi Itoh(Graduate school of Science, Kyoto University), Hikaru Yabuta(Osaka University, Department of Earth and Space Science), Hitoshi Miura(Graduate School of Natural Sciences, Department of Information and Biological Sciences, Nagoya City University), Chair:Tomohiro Usui(Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences,Tokyo Institute of Technology), Shoichi Itoh(Graduate school of Science, Kyoto University)

9:15 AM - 9:30 AM

[PPS25-02] 147Sm-143Nd and 146Sm-142Nd chronology of a basaltic eucrite, Juvinas

*Saya KAGAMI1, Tetsuya YOKOYAMA1 (1.Dept. Earth and Planetary Sciences, Tokyo Tech)

Eucrites are interpreted to have originated from the asteroid 4-Vesta which differentiated into crust and mantle. The chronology of eucrites is important to understand the formation and differentiation of planets/ planetesimals in the early Solar System. The combination of two chronometers, short-lived 146Sm-142Nd system (T1/2=6.8×107yr) and long-lived 147Sm-143Nd (T1/2=1.06×1011yr), is useful to decode the thermal history of the eucrite parent body, because they have the same closure temperature [1]. To obtain precise Sm-Nd ages for eucrites and other achondrites, it is indispensable to develop highly precise Nd isotope analysis.We investigated the 147Sm-143Nd and 146Sm-142Nd chronometers for a brecciated basaltic eucrite, Juvinas. We examined samples of whole rock powder (W.R.), 400 mesh grains, plagioclase (Pl), and pyroxene (Px). Plagioclase and pyroxene grains were obtained by handpicking. Samples were dissolved using a mixture of concentrated pure acid (HClO4, HF, and HNO3) and heating at 195℃. About ten percent of the solution was removed and spiked with 149Sm-145Nd in order to precisely measure Sm and Nd concentrations by ID-ICP-MS (Thermo X-series II at Tokyo Tech). We separated Nd from the rest of the solution via a four-step column chemistry. Nd isotope ratios in W.R., 400mesh, Pl, and Px were analyzed by TIMS (Thermo TRITON-plus at Tokyo Tech) with the dynamic multicollection method.The 147Sm-143Nd mineral isochron diagram of Juvinas, yielded an age of 4610±410 Ma. In contrast, the 146Sm-142Nd systematic for Juvinas yielded an initial 146Sm/144Sm ratio of 0.0157±0.0074. This gives ?4618?_(-63)^(+38) Ma for the age of Juvinas when an initial solar system ratio of 146Sm/144Sm=0.0094 at 4568 Ma is assumed [1]. The self-consistency of the 147Sm-144Nd and 146Sm-142Nd ages for Juvinas supports early crust-mantle differentiation on the eucrite parent body as was proposed by previous chronological studies on basaltic eucrites (e.g., Pb-Pb, Al-Mg, Mn-Cr, and Hf-W; [2-5]). It has been suggested that cumulate eucrites provide internal isochron ages younger than basaltic eucrites due to a longer history in the deep crust or late thermal disturbance during later meteorite bombardment event(s) [6]. Because of the limited Sm/Nd variation in the meteorite components analyzed, the Sm-Nd ages obtained in this study have uncertainties several times larger than those in previous studies [6]. The 147Sm-143Nd age and the initial 143Nd/144Nd ratio for Juvinas are consistent with those obtained by the mineral isochrons of three cumulate eucrites within analytical error (4546±8 Ma; [6]). However, our 146Sm-142Nd age is older than the proposed 147Sm-143Nd age for cumulate eucrites, indicating that the crystallization of basaltic eucrites predates the timing when the Sm-Nd systematics for cumulate eucrites reached a closure temperature. It should be noted that Juvinas is a brecciated basaltic eucrite which may not record a correct Sm-Nd age. Further investigation is required to obtain more precise Sm-Nd ages utilizing unbrecciated basaltic eucrite to reveal the thermal history on the eucrite parent body.References: [1] N. Kinoshita et al., (2012) Science, 335, 1614 [2] S.J.G. Galer and G.W. Lugmair, (1996) MAPS, 31, A47. [3] M. Wadhwa et al., (2003) LPSC XXXIV, 2055. [4] G.W. Lugmair and A. Shukolyukov, (1998) GCA 62, 2863. [5] T. Kleine et al., (2004) GCA 68, 2935. [6] M. Boyet et al., (2010) EPSL 291, 172.