The anomalous polymict ordinary chondrite breccia of Elmshorn (H3‐6)—Late reaccretion after collision between two ordinary chondrite parent bodies, complete disruption, and mixing possibly about 2.8 Gyr ago

Author:

Bischoff Addi1ORCID,Patzek Markus1ORCID,Alosius Romain M. L.2ORCID,Barrat Jean‐Alix34,Berndt Jasper5,Busemann Henner2ORCID,Degering Detlev6,Di Rocco Tommaso7,Ek Mattias2ORCID,Gattacceca Jérôme8ORCID,Godinho Jose R. A.9,Heinlein Dieter10,Krietsch Daniela2ORCID,Maden Colin2ORCID,Marchhart Oscar11,Martschini Martin11,Merchel Silke11,Pack Andreas7,Peters Stefan12,Rüfenacht Miriam2ORCID,Schlüter Jochen12,Schönbächler Maria2ORCID,Stojic Aleksandra1,Storz Jakob1,Tillmann Wolfgang13,Wieser Alexander11,Wimmer Karl14,Zielke Reiner13

Affiliation:

1. Institut für Planetologie University of Münster Münster Germany

2. Institute of Geochemistry and Petrology, ETH Zürich Zurich Switzerland

3. Univ Brest, CNRS, Ifremer, IRD, LEMAR Institut Universitaire Européen de la Mer (IUEM), Place Nicolas Copernic Plouzané France

4. Institut Universitaire de France Paris France

5. Institut für Mineralogie University of Münster Münster Germany

6. VKTA—Strahlenschutz, Analytik & Entsorgung Rossendorf e. V. Dresden Germany

7. Geowissenschaftliches Zentrum Universität Göttingen Göttingen Germany

8. CNRS, Aix Marseille Univ, IRD, INRAE, CEREGE Aix‐en‐Provence France

9. Helmholtz‐Zentrum Dresden‐Rossendorf Helmholtz Institute Freiberg for Resource Technology Freiberg Germany

10. German Fireball Network Augsburg Germany

11. Faculty of Physics, Isotope Physics University of Vienna Vienna Austria

12. Museum der Natur Hamburg—Mineralogie, LIB Hamburg Germany

13. RIF Institut für Forschung und Transfer e.V. Dortmund Germany

14. Salvatorgasse 12 Nördlingen Germany

Abstract

AbstractElmshorn fell April 25, 2023, about 30 km northwest of the city of Hamburg (Germany). Shortly after the fall, 21 pieces were recovered totaling a mass of 4277 g. Elmshorn is a polymict and anomalous H3‐6 chondritic, fragmental breccia. The rock is a mixture of typical H chondrite lithologies and clasts of intermediate H/L (or L, based on magnetic properties) chondrite origin. In some of the 21 pieces, the H chondrite lithologies dominate, while in others the H/L (or L) chondrite components are prevalent. The H/L chondrite assignment of these components is based on the mean composition of their olivines in equilibrated type 4 fragments (~Fa21–22). The physical properties like density (3.34 g cm−3) and magnetic susceptibility (logχ <5.0, with χ in 10−9 m3 kg−1) are typical for L chondrites, which is inconsistent with the oxygen isotope compositions: all eight O isotope analyses from two different fragments clearly fall into the H chondrite field. Thus, the fragments found in the strewn field vary in mineralogy, mineral chemistry, and physical properties but not in O isotope characteristics. The sample most intensively studied belongs to the stones dominated by H chondrite lithologies. The chemical composition and nucleosynthetic Cr and Ti isotope data are typical for ordinary chondrites. The noble gases in Elmshorn represent a mixture between cosmogenic, radiogenic, and primordially trapped noble gases, while a solar wind component can be excluded. Because the chondritic rock of Elmshorn contains (a) H chondrite parent body interior materials (of types 5 and 6), (b) chondrite parent body near‐surface materials (of types 3 and 4), (c) fragments of an H/L chondrite (dominant in many stones), (d) shock‐darkened fragments, and (e) clasts of various types of impact melts but no solar wind‐implanted noble gases, the different components cannot have been part of a parent body regolith. The most straightforward explanation is that the fragmental breccia of Elmshorn represents a reaccreted rock after a catastrophic collision between an H chondrite parent body and another body with H/L (or L) chondrite characteristics but with deviating O isotope values (i.e. that of H chondrites), complete disruption of the bodies, mixing, and reassembly. This is the only straightforward way that the implantation of solar wind gases could have been avoided in this kind of complex breccia. The gas retention ages of about 2.8 Gyr possibly indicate the closure time after the catastrophic collision between H and H/L (or L) chondrite parent bodies, while the cosmic ray exposure age for Elmshorn, which had a preatmospheric radius of 25–40 cm, is ~17–20 Myr.

Funder

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Alexander von Humboldt-Stiftung

Publisher

Wiley

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