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The fall, recovery, classification, and initial characterization of the Hamburg, Michigan H4 chondrite

Authors :
Guo-Qiang Tang
Matthew E. Sanborn
Marc Fries
K. C. Welten
William S. Cassata
Catherine M. Corrigan
Joseph S. Boesenberg
Audrey Bouvier
Qin Zhou
Donald W. Davis
Mike Hankey
Jennika Greer
Douglas J. Rowland
Philipp R. Heck
Karen Ziegler
Brandon Weller
Qing-Zhu Yin
Peter Jenniskens
Marc W. Caffee
Philippe Schmitt-Kopplin
Kenneth L. Verosub
Reto Trappitsch
Qiu-Li Li
Andrew M. Davis
Yu Liu
Shannon Sheu
Zoltán Zajacz
Xian-Hua Li
Michael A. Velbel
Source :
Meteoritics & planetary science, vol 55, iss 11, Meteorit. Planet. Sci. 55, 2341-2359 (2020), Meteoritics & Planetary Science
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
eScholarship, University of California, 2020.

Abstract

The Hamburg meteorite fell on January 16, 2018, near Hamburg, Michigan, after a fireball event widely observed in the U.S. Midwest and in Ontario, Canada. Several fragments fell onto frozen surfaces of lakes and, thanks to weather radar data, were recovered days after the fall. The studied rock fragments show no or little signs of terrestrial weathering. Here, we present the initial results from an international consortium study to describe the fall, characterize the meteorite, and probe the collision history of Hamburg. About 1kg of recovered meteorites was initially reported. Petrology, mineral chemistry, trace element and organic chemistry, and O and Cr isotopic compositions are characteristic of H4 chondrites. Cosmic ray exposure ages based on cosmogenic 3He, 21Ne, and 38Ar are ~12Ma, and roughly agree with each other. Noble gas data as well as the cosmogenic 10Be concentration point to a small 40-60cm diameter meteoroid. An 40Ar-39Ar age of 4532±24Ma indicates no major impact event occurring later in its evolutionary history, consistent with data of other H4 chondrites. Microanalyses of phosphates with LA-ICPMS give an average Pb-Pb age of 4549±36Ma. This is in good agreement with the average SIMS Pb-Pb phosphate age of 4535.3±9.5Ma and U-Pb Concordia age of 4535±10Ma. The weighted average age of 4541.6±9.5Ma reflects the metamorphic phosphate crystallization age after parent body formation in the early solar system.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Meteoritics & planetary science, vol 55, iss 11, Meteorit. Planet. Sci. 55, 2341-2359 (2020), Meteoritics & Planetary Science
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....daa997a34d5bae70cae36da9f7dbcff7