Bulk mineralogy, water abundance, and hydrogen isotope composition of unequilibrated ordinary chondrites

Author:

Grant Helen1ORCID,Tartèse Romain1ORCID,Jones Rhian1ORCID,Piani Laurette2,Marrocchi Yves2,King Ashley3ORCID,Rigaudier Thomas2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences The University of Manchester Manchester UK

2. CNRS, CRPG, UMR 7358 Université de Lorraine Vandoeuvre les Nancy France

3. Planetary Materials Group Natural History Museum London UK

Abstract

AbstractThe origin and transport of water in the early Solar System is an important topic in both astrophysics and planetary science, with applications to protosolar disk evolution, planetary formation, and astrobiology. Of particular interest for understanding primordial water transport are the unequilibrated ordinary chondrites (UOCs), which have been affected by very limited alteration since their formation. Using X‐ray diffraction and isotope ratio mass spectrometry, we determined the bulk mineralogy, H2O content, and D/H ratios of 21 UOCs spanning from petrologic subtypes 3.00–3.9. The studied UOC falls of the lowest subtypes contain approximately 1 wt% H2O, and water abundance globally decreases with increasing thermal metamorphism. In addition, UOC falls of the lowest subtypes have elevated D/H ratios as high as those determined for some outer Solar System comets. This does not easily fit with existing models of water in the protoplanetary disk, which suggest D/H ratios were low in the warm inner Solar System and increased radially. These new analyses confirm that OC parent bodies accreted a D‐rich component, possibly originating from either the outer protosolar nebula or from injection of molecular cloud streamers. The sharp decrease of D/H ratios with increasing metamorphism suggests that the phase(s) hosting this D‐rich component is readily destroyed through thermal alteration.

Funder

Agence Nationale de la Recherche

Science and Technology Facilities Council

UK Research and Innovation

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Space and Planetary Science,Geophysics

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