Articolo in rivista, 2019, ENG, 10.1016/j.epsl.2019.06.033

Bulk chondrite variability in mass independent magnesium isotope compositions - Implications for initial solar system <sup>26</sup>Al/<sup>27</sup>Al and the timing of terrestrial accretion

Luu, Tu Han; Hin, Remco C.; Coath, Christopher D.; Elliott, Tim

University of Bristol

We have determined ?Mg, the mass-independent variations in Mg/Mg, of primitive, bulk meteorites to precisions better than ±3 ppm (2se). Our measurements of samples from 10 different chondrite groups show ?Mg that vary from -5 to 22 ppm. Our data define an array with a positive slope in a plot of ?Mg against Al/Mg, which can be used to determine (Al/Al), i.e. initial Al/Al, and (?Mg), i.e. initial ?Mg. On such an isochron plot, the best fit of our new measurements combined with literature data implies (Al/Al) of (4.67±0.78)×10 and (?Mg) of -31.6 ± 5.7 ppm (2se) for ordinary and carbonaceous chondrites, other than CR chondrites, which have anomalously low ?Mg. These parameters are within uncertainty of those defined by previous measurements of bulk calcium-, aluminium-rich inclusions (CAIs) that set canonical (Al/Al)~05×10. The most straightforward interpretation of all these observations is that differences in the Al/Mg of bulk ordinary and carbonaceous chondrites are dominantly controlled by variable contributions of early-formed refractory and major silicate components derived from a common, canonical reservoir. The ?Mg of enstatite chondrites are slightly more radiogenic (~3 ppm) at similar Al/Mg to the ordinary chondrites. We speculate that this is related to the timing of removal of a refractory component from the source reservoirs of these different meteorite groups; the higher ?Mg of the enstatite chondrites suggests later (~0.5 Ma post CAIs) condensation and loss of this refractory component. Despite inferred consistency of (Al/Al) and (?Mg) across most chondrite groups, some nebular heterogeneity is required to account for the compositions of CR chondrites. Our preferred interpretation is that the CR source region has lower (?Mg). As the most appropriate isotopic reference for the Earth, our new mean enstatite chondrite composition allows us to assess possible ingrowth of Mg from live Al during accretion of the Earth. The Earth has ?Mg within uncertainty of enstatite chondrites, despite its higher Al/Mg. This requires that the terrestrial increase in Al/Mg, which we attribute to vapour loss during accretion, must have happened >1.5 Ma post CAI formation, in an instantaneous fractionation model.

Earth and planetary science letters 522 , pp. 166–175

Keywords

26 Al homogeneity, 26 Mg mass-independent variability, bulk chondrites, Mg-isotope analyses, planetary bodies

CNR authors

Hin Remco Christiaan

CNR institutes

IGAG – Istituto di geologia ambientale e geoingegneria

ID: 490679

Year: 2019

Type: Articolo in rivista

Creation: 2023-12-27 10:30:05.000

Last update: 2024-01-26 15:20:48.000

External IDs

CNR OAI-PMH: oai:it.cnr:prodotti:490679

DOI: 10.1016/j.epsl.2019.06.033

Scopus: 2-s2.0-85068787560