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Chondrite

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Chondrite
— Type —
A specimen of the NWA 869 chondrite (type L4–6), showing chondrules and metal flakes
Compositional typeStony
Parent bodySmall to medium asteroids that were never part of a body large enough to undergo melting and planetary differentiation.
Petrologic type3–6
Total known specimensOver 27,000

A chondrite /ˈkɒndrt/ is a stony (non-metallic) meteorite that has not been modified by either melting or differentiation of the parent body.[a][1] They are formed when various types of dust and small grains in the early Solar System accreted to form primitive asteroids. Some such bodies that are captured in the planet's gravity well become the most common type of meteorite by arriving on a trajectory toward the planet's surface. Estimates for their contribution to the total meteorite population vary between 85.7%[2] and 86.2%.[3]

Their study provides important clues for understanding the origin and age of the Solar System, the synthesis of organic compounds, the origin of life and the presence of water on Earth. One of their characteristics is the presence of chondrules (from the Ancient Greek χόνδρος chondros, grain), which are round grains formed in space as molten or partially molten droplets of distinct minerals. Chondrules typically constitute between 20% and 80% of a chondrite by volume.[4]

Chondrites can be distinguished from iron meteorites by their low iron and nickel content. Non-metallic meteorites that lack chondrules are achondrites, which are believed to have formed more recently than chondrites.[5] There are currently over 27,000 chondrites in the world's collections. The largest individual stone ever recovered, weighing 1770 kg, was part of the Jilin meteorite shower of 1976. Chondrite falls range from single stones to extraordinary showers consisting of thousands of individual stones. An instance of the latter occurred in the Holbrook fall of 1912, in which an estimated 14,000 stones were grounded in northern Arizona.

Origin and history

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Chondrites were formed by the accretion of particles of dust and grit present in the primitive Solar System which gave rise to asteroids over 4.54 billion years ago. These asteroid parent bodies of chondrites are (or were) small to medium-sized asteroids that were never part of any body large enough to undergo melting and planetary differentiation. Dating using 206Pb/204Pb gives an estimated age of 4,566.6 ± 1.0 Ma,[6] matching ages for other chronometers. Another indication of their age is the fact that the abundance of non-volatile elements in chondrites is similar to that found in the atmosphere of the Sun and other stars in the Milky Way galaxy.[7]

Although chondritic asteroids never became hot enough to melt based upon internal temperatures, many of them reached high enough temperatures that they experienced significant thermal metamorphism in their interiors. The source of the heat was most likely energy coming from the decay of short-lived radioisotopes (half-lives less than a few million years) that were present in the newly formed Solar System, especially 26Al and 60Fe, although heating may have been caused by impacts onto the asteroids as well. Many chondritic asteroids also contained significant amounts of water, possibly due to the accretion of ice along with rocky material.

As a result, many chondrites contain hydrous minerals, such as clays, that formed when the water interacted with the rock on the asteroid in a process known as aqueous alteration. In addition, all chondritic asteroids were affected by impact and shock processes due to collisions with other asteroids. These events caused a variety of effects, ranging from simple compaction to brecciation, veining, localized melting, and formation of high-pressure minerals. The net result of these secondary thermal, aqueous, and shock processes is that only a few known chondrites preserve in pristine form the original dust, chondrules, and inclusions from which they formed.

Protoplanetary disk: particles of dust and grit collide and accrete forming planets or asteroids
Chondrules in chondrite from the Bjurböle meteorite[8]
Chondrules in chondrite from the Grassland meteor[9]

Characteristics

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Prominent among the components present in chondrites are the enigmatic chondrules, millimetre-sized spherical objects that originated as freely floating, molten or partially molten droplets in space; most chondrules are rich in the silicate minerals olivine and pyroxene.

Shiny Ni/Fe metal is prominently displayed in this ordinary chondrite found in Northwest Africa
Chondrule in Chondrite from NWA 10499 LL3 Primitive Chondrite[10]


Chondrites also contain refractory inclusions (including Ca–Al inclusions), which are among the oldest objects to form in the Solar System, particles rich in metallic Fe-Ni and sulfides, and isolated grains of silicate minerals. The remainder of chondrites consists of fine-grained (micrometre-sized or smaller) dust, which may either be present as the matrix of the rock or may form rims or mantles around individual chondrules and refractory inclusions. Embedded in this dust are presolar grains, which predate the formation of the Solar System and originated elsewhere in the galaxy. The chondrules have distinct texture, composition and mineralogy, and their origin continues to be the object of some debate.[11] The scientific community generally accepts that these spheres were formed by the action of a shock wave that passed through the Solar System, although there is little agreement as to the cause of this shock wave.[12]

An article published in 2005 proposed that the gravitational instability of the gaseous disk that formed Jupiter generated a shock wave with a velocity of more than 10 km/s, which resulted in the formation of the chondrules.[13]

Chondrite classification

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Chondrites are divided into about 15 distinct groups (see Meteorites classification) on the basis of their mineralogy,[14] bulk chemical composition, and oxygen isotope compositions[15] (see below). The various chondrite groups likely originated on separate asteroids or groups of related asteroids. Each chondrite group has a distinctive mixture of chondrules, refractory inclusions, matrix (dust), and other components and a characteristic grain size. Other ways of classifying chondrites include weathering[16] and shock.[17]

Chondrites can also be categorized according to their petrologic type, which is the degree to which they were thermally metamorphosed or aqueously altered (they are assigned a number between 1 and 7). The chondrules in a chondrite that is assigned a "3" have not been altered. Larger numbers indicate an increase in thermal metamorphosis up to a maximum of 7, where the chondrules have been destroyed. Numbers lower than 3 are given to chondrites whose chondrules have been changed by the presence of water, down to 1, where the chondrules have been obliterated by this alteration.

A synthesis of the various classification schemes is provided in the table below.[18]

Type Subtype Distinguishing features/Chondrule character Letter designation[b]
Enstatite chondrites Abundant E3, EH3, EL3
Distinct E4, EH4, EL4
Less distinct E5, EH5, EL5
Indistinct E6, EH6, EL6
Melted E7, EH7, EL7
Ordinary chondrites H Abundant H3–H3,9
Distinct H4
Less distinct H5
Indistinct H6
Melted H7
L Abundant L3–L3,9
Distinct L4
Less distinct L5
Indistinct L6
Melted L7
LL Abundant LL3–LL3,9
Distinct LL4
Less distinct LL5
Indistinct LL6
Melted LL7
Carbonaceous chondrites Ivuna Phyllosilicates, Magnetite CI
Mighei Phyllosilicates, Olivine CM1–CM2
Vigarano Olivines rich in Fe, Ca minerals and Al CV2–CV3.3
Renazzo Phyllosilicates, Olivine, Pyroxene, metals CR
Ornans Olivine, Pyroxene, metals, Ca minerals and Al CO3–CO3.7
Karoonda Olivine, Ca minerals and Al CK
Bencubbin Pyroxene, metals CB
Loongana Chondrules and CAIs, metals CL
High Iron[c] Pyroxene, metals, Olivine CH
Tagish Lake[d] Phyllosilicates, Magnetite, Ca-Mg-Fe carbonates TAG
Kakangari-type     K
Rumurutiites   Olivine, Pyroxenes, Plagioclase, Sulfides R

Enstatite chondrites

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The Saint Sauveur enstatite chondrite (EH5)

Enstatite chondrites (also known as E-type chondrites) are a rare form of meteorite thought to comprise only about 2% of the chondrites that fall to Earth.[19] Only about 200 E-Type chondrites are currently known.[19] The majority of enstatite chondrites have either been recovered in Antarctica or have been collected by the American National Weather Association. They tend to be high in the mineral enstatite (MgSiO3), from which they derive their name.[19]

E-type chondrites are among the most chemically reduced rocks known, with most of their iron taking the form of metal or sulfide rather than as an oxide. This suggests that they were formed in an area that lacked oxygen, probably within the orbit of Mercury.[20]

Ordinary chondrites

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Phnom Penh Chondrite L6 – 1868
El Menia Ordinary chondrite L5 - 2023

Ordinary chondrites are by far the most common type of meteorite to fall to Earth: about 80% of all meteorites and over 90% of chondrites are ordinary chondrites.[11] They contain abundant chondrules, sparse matrix (10–15% of the rock), few refractory inclusions, and variable amounts of Fe–Ni metal and troilite (FeS). Their chondrules are generally in the range of 0.5 to 1 mm in diameter. Ordinary chondrites are distinguished chemically by their depletions in refractory lithophile elements, such as Ca, Al, Ti, and rare earths, relative to Si, and isotopically by their unusually high 17O/16O ratios relative to 18O/16O compared to Earth rocks.

Most, but not all, ordinary chondrites have experienced significant degrees of metamorphism, having reached temperatures well above 500 °C on the parent asteroids. They are divided into three groups, which have different amounts of metal and different amounts of total iron:

  • H chondrite have high total iron and high metallic Fe (15–20% Fe–Ni metal by mass[21]), and smaller chondrules than L and LL chondrites. They are formed of bronzite, olivine, pyroxene, plagioclase, metals and sulfides and ~42% of ordinary chondrite falls belong to this group (see Meteorite fall statistics).
  • L chondrites have low total iron contents (including 7–11% Fe–Ni metal by mass). ~46% of ordinary chondrite falls belong to this group, which makes them the most common type of meteorite to fall on Earth.
  • LL chondrites have low total iron and low metal contents (3–5% Fe–Ni metal by mass of which 2% is metallic Fe and they also contain bronzite, oligoclase and olivine).[18] Only 1 in 10 ordinary chondrite falls belong to this group.

An example of this group is the NWA 869 meteorite.

Carbonaceous chondrites

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Carbonaceous chondrite CV3 that fell in Mexico in 1969

Carbonaceous chondrites (also known as C-type chondrites) make up less than 5% of the chondrites that fall on Earth.[22] They are characterized by the presence of carbon compounds, including amino acids.[23] They are thought to have been formed the farthest from the sun of any of the chondrites as they have the highest proportion of volatile compounds.[2] Another of their main characteristics is the presence of water or of minerals that have been altered by the presence of water.

There are many groups of carbonaceous chondrites, but most of them are distinguished chemically by enrichments in refractory lithophile elements relative to Si and isotopically by unusually low ratios of 17O/16O relative to 18O/16O, when compared to Earth rocks. All groups of carbonaceous chondrites except the CH group are named for a characteristic type specimen:

  • CI (Ivuna type) chondrites entirely lack chondrules and refractory inclusions; they are composed almost exclusively of fine-grained material that has experienced a high degree of aqueous alteration on the parent asteroid. CI chondrites are highly oxidized, brecciated rocks, containing abundant magnetite and sulfate minerals, and lacking metallic Fe. It is a matter of some controversy whether they once had chondrules and refractory inclusions that were later destroyed during formation of hydrous minerals, or they never had chondrules in the first place[citation needed]. CI chondrites are notable because their chemical compositions closely resemble that of the solar photosphere, neglecting the hydrogen and helium. Thus, they have the most "primitive" compositions of any meteorites and are often used as a standard for assessing the degree of chemical fractionation experienced by materials formed throughout the Solar System.
  • CO (Ornans type) and CM (Mighei type) chondrites are two related groups that contain very small chondrules, mostly 0.1 to 0.3 mm in diameter; refractory inclusions are quite abundant and have similar sizes to chondrules.
    • CM chondrites are composed of about 70% fine-grained material (matrix), and most have experienced extensive aqueous alteration. The much studied Murchison meteorite, which fell in Australia in 1969, is the best-known member of this group.
    • CO chondrites have only about 30% matrix and have experienced very little aqueous alteration. Most have experienced small degrees of thermal metamorphism.
  • CR (Renazzo type), CB (Bencubbin type), and CH (high metal) carbonaceous chondrites are three groups that seem to be related by their chemical and oxygen isotopic compositions. All are rich in metallic Fe–Ni, with CH and especially CB chondrites having a higher proportion of metal than all other chondrite groups. Although CR chondrites are clearly similar in most ways to other chondrite groups, the origins of CH and CB chondrites are somewhat controversial. Some workers conclude that many of the chondrules and metal grains in these chondrites may have formed by impact processes after "normal" chondrules had already formed, and thus they may not be "true" chondrites.


    • CR chondrites have chondrules that are similar in size to those in ordinary chondrites (near 1 mm), few refractory inclusions, and matrix comprises nearly half the rock. Many CR chondrites have experienced extensive aqueous alteration, but some have mostly escaped this process.
    • CH chondrites are remarkable for their very tiny chondrules, typically only about 0.02 mm (20 micrometres) in diameter. They have a small proportion of equally tiny refractory inclusions. Dusty material occurs as discrete clasts, rather than as a true matrix. CH chondrites are also distinguished by extreme depletions in volatile elements.
    • CB chondrites occur in two types, both of which are similar to CH chondrites in that they are very depleted in volatile elements and rich in metal. CBa (subgroup a) chondrites are coarse grained, with large, often cm-sized chondrules and metal grains and almost no refractory inclusions. Chondrules have unusual textures compared to most other chondrites. As in CH chondrites, dusty material only occurs in discrete clasts, and there is no fine-grained matrix. CBb (subgroup b) chondrites contain much smaller (mm-sized) chondrules and do contain refractory inclusions.
  • CV (Vigarano type) chondrites are characterized by mm-sized chondrules and abundant refractory inclusions set in a dark matrix that comprises about half the rock. CV chondrites are noted for spectacular refractory inclusions, some of which reach centimetre sizes, and they are the only group to contain a distinctive type of large, once-molten inclusions. Chemically, CV chondrites have the highest abundances of refractory lithophile elements of any chondrite group. The CV group includes the remarkable Allende fall in Mexico in 1969, which became one of the most widely distributed and, certainly, the best-studied meteorite in history.
  • CK (Karoonda type) chondrites are chemically and texturally similar to CV chondrites. However, they contain far fewer refractory inclusions than CV, they are much more oxidized rocks, and most of them have experienced considerable amounts of thermal metamorphism (compared to CV and all other groups of carbonaceous chondrites).
  • CL (Loongana type) chondrites are largely chondrules and CAIs, correspondingly low in matrix and volatiles, with trace elements resembling CR. Triple oxygen position near the CV-CK area.
  • Ungrouped carbonaceous chondrites: A number of chondrites are clearly members of the carbonaceous chondrite class, but do not fit into any of the groups. These include: the Tagish Lake meteorite, which fell in Canada in 2000 and is intermediate between CI and CM chondrites; and Acfer 094, an extremely primitive chondrite that shares properties with both CM and CO groups.

Kakangari chondrites

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Three chondrites form what is known as the K (Kakangari type) grouplet: Kakangari, LEW 87232, and Lea Co. 002.[24] They are characterized by large amounts of dusty matrix and oxygen isotope compositions similar to carbonaceous chondrites, highly reduced mineral compositions and high metal abundances (6% to 10% by volume) that are most like enstatite chondrites, and concentrations of refractory lithophile elements that are most like ordinary chondrites.

Many of their other characteristics are similar to the O, E and C chondrites.[25]

Rumuruti chondrites

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Rumuruti (R) type chondrites are a very rare group, with only one documented fall out of almost 900 documented chondrite falls. They have a number of properties in common with ordinary chondrites, including similar types of chondrules, few refractory inclusions, similar chemical composition for most elements, and the fact that 17O/16O ratios are anomalously high compared to Earth rocks. However, there are significant differences between R chondrites and ordinary chondrites: R chondrites have much more dusty matrix material (about 50% of the rock); they are much more oxidized, containing little metallic Fe–Ni; and their enrichments in 17O are higher than those of ordinary chondrites. Nearly all the metal they contain is oxidized or in the form of sulfides. They contain fewer chondrules than the E chondrites and appear to come from an asteroid's regolith.[26]

Composition

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Because chondrites accumulated from material that formed very early in the history of the Solar System, and because chondritic asteroids did not melt, they have very primitive compositions. "Primitive," in this sense, means that the abundances of most chemical elements do not differ greatly from those that are measured by spectroscopic methods in the photosphere of the sun, which in turn should be well-representative of the entire Solar System (note: to make such a comparison between a gaseous object like the sun and a rock like a chondrite, scientists choose one rock-forming element, such as silicon (Si), to use as a reference point, and then compare ratios. Thus, the atomic ratio of Mg/Si measured in the sun (1.07) is identical to that measured in CI chondrites[27]).

Although all chondrite compositions can be considered primitive, there is variation among the different groups, as discussed above. CI chondrites seem to be nearly identical in composition to the sun for all but the gas-forming elements (e.g., hydrogen (H), carbon (C), nitrogen (N), and noble gases: helium (He), neon (Ne), argon (Ar) etc.). Other chondrite groups deviate from the solar composition (i.e., they are fractionated) in highly systematic ways:

  • At some point during the formation of many chondrites, particles of metal became partially separated from particles of silicate minerals. As a result, chondrites coming from asteroids that did not accrete with their full complement of metal (e.g., L, LL, and EL chondrites) are depleted in all siderophile elements, whereas those that accreted too much metal (e.g., CH, CB, and EH chondrites) are enriched in these elements compared to the sun.
  • In a similar manner, although the exact process is not very well understood, highly refractory elements like Ca and Al became separated from less refractory elements like Mg and Si, and were not uniformly sampled by each asteroid. The parent bodies of many groups of carbonaceous chondrites contain over-sampled grains rich in refractory elements, whereas those of ordinary and enstatite chondrites were deficient in them.
  • No chondrites except the CI group formed with a full, solar complement of volatile elements. In general, the level of depletion corresponds to the degree of volatility, where the most volatile elements are most depleted.

Petrologic types

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A chondrite's group is determined by its primary chemical, mineralogical, and isotopic characteristics (above). The degree to which it has been affected by the secondary processes of thermal metamorphism and aqueous alteration on the parent asteroid is indicated by its petrologic type, which appears as a number following the group name (e.g., an LL5 chondrite belongs to the LL group and has a petrologic type of 5). The current scheme for describing petrologic types was devised by Van Schmus and Wood in 1967.[14]

The petrologic-type scheme originated by Van Schmus and Wood is really two separate schemes, one describing aqueous alteration (types 1–2) and one describing thermal metamorphism (types 3–6). The aqueous alteration part of the system works as follows:

  • Type 1 was originally used to designate chondrites that lacked chondrules and contained large amounts of water and carbon. Current usage of type 1 is simply to indicate meteorites that have experienced extensive aqueous alteration, to the point that most of their olivine and pyroxene have been altered to hydrous phases. This alteration took place at temperatures of 50 to 150 °C, so type 1 chondrites were warm, but not hot enough to experience thermal metamorphism. The members of the CI group, plus a few highly altered carbonaceous chondrites of other groups, are the only instances of type 1 chondrites.
  • Type 2 chondrites are those that have experienced extensive aqueous alteration, but still contain recognizable chondrules as well as primary, unaltered olivine and/or pyroxene. The fine-grained matrix is generally fully hydrated and minerals inside chondrules may show variable degrees of hydration. This alteration probably occurred at temperatures below 20 °C, and again, these meteorites are not thermally metamorphosed. Almost all CM and CR chondrites are petrologic type 2; with the exception of some ungrouped carbonaceous chondrites, no other chondrites are type 2.

The thermal metamorphism part of the scheme describes a continuous sequence of changes to mineralogy and texture that accompany increasing metamorphic temperatures. These chondrites show little evidence of the effects of aqueous alteration:

  • Type 3 chondrites show low degrees of metamorphism. They are often referred to as unequilibrated chondrites because minerals such as olivine and pyroxene show a wide range of compositions, reflecting formation under a wide variety of conditions in the solar nebula. (Type 1 and 2 chondrites are also unequilibrated.) Chondrites that remain in nearly pristine condition, with all components (chondrules, matrix, etc.) having nearly the same composition and mineralogy as when they accreted to the parent asteroid, are designated type 3.0. As petrologic type increases from type 3.1 through 3.9, profound mineralogical changes occur, starting in the dusty matrix, and then increasingly affecting the coarser-grained components like chondrules. Type 3.9 chondrites still look superficially unchanged because chondrules retain their original appearances, but all of the minerals have been affected, mostly due to diffusion of elements between grains of different composition.
  • Types 4, 5, and 6 chondrites have been increasingly altered by thermal metamorphism. These are equilibrated chondrites, in which the compositions of most minerals have become quite homogeneous due to high temperatures. By type 4, the matrix has thoroughly recrystallized and coarsened in grain size. By type 5, chondrules begin to become indistinct and matrix cannot be discerned. In type 6 chondrites, chondrules begin to integrate with what was once matrix, and small chondrules may no longer be recognizable. As metamorphism proceeds, many minerals coarsen and new, metamorphic minerals such as feldspar form.

Some workers have extended the Van Schmus and Wood metamorphic scheme to include a type 7, although there is not consensus on whether this is necessary. Type 7 chondrites have experienced the highest temperatures possible, short of that required to produce melting. Should the onset of melting occur the meteorite would probably be classified as a primitive achondrite instead of a chondrite.

All groups of ordinary and enstatite chondrites, as well as R and CK chondrites, show the complete metamorphic range from type 3 to 6. CO chondrites comprise only type 3 members, although these span a range of petrologic types from 3.0 to 3.8.

Presence of water

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These meteorites either contain a proportion of water or minerals that have been altered by water. This suggests that the asteroid from which these meteorites originate must have contained water. At the beginning of the Solar System this would have been present as ice and a few million years after the asteroid formed the ice would have melted allowing the liquid water to react with and alter the olivines and pyroxenes. The formation of rivers and lakes on the asteroid is thought to have been unlikely if it was sufficiently porous to allow the water to percolate towards its interior, as occurs in terrestrial aquifers.[28]

It is thought possible that a proportion of the water present on the Earth comes from the impact of comets and carbonaceous chondrites with the Earth's surface.[29][30]

Origin of life

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Amino acid general structure

Carbonaceous chondrites contain more than 600 organic compounds that were synthesized in distinct places and at distinct times. These organic compounds include: hydrocarbons, carboxylic acids, alcohols, ketones, aldehydes, amines, amides, sulfonic acids, phosphonic acids, amino acids, nitrogenous bases, etc.[31] These compounds can be divided into three main groups: a fraction that is not soluble in chloroform or methanol, chloroform soluble hydrocarbons and a fraction that is soluble in methanol (which includes the amino acids).

The first fraction appears to originate from interstellar space and the compounds belonging to the other fractions derive from a planetoid. It has been proposed that the amino acids were synthesized close to the surface of a planetoid by the radiolysis (dissociation of molecules caused by radiation) of hydrocarbons and ammonium carbonate in the presence of liquid water. In addition, the hydrocarbons could have formed deep within a planetoid by a process similar to the Fischer–Tropsch process. These conditions could be analogous to the events that caused the origin of life on Earth.[32]

The Murchison meteorite is on display at the Smithsonian's NMNH.

The Murchison meteorite has been thoroughly studied; it fell in Australia close to the town that bears its name on 28 September 1969. It is a CM2 and it contains common amino acids such as glycine, alanine and glutamic acid as well as other less common ones such as isovaline and pseudo-leucine.[33]

Two meteorites that were collected in Antarctica in 1992 and 1995 were found to be abundant in amino acids, which are present at concentrations of 180 and 249 ppm (carbonaceous chondrites normally contain concentrations of 15 ppm or less). This could indicate that organic material is more abundant in the Solar System than was previously believed, and it reinforces the idea that the organic compounds present in the primordial soup could have had an extraterrestrial origin.[34]

See also

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Notes

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
A chondrite is a type of primitive stony meteorite characterized by the presence of chondrules, which are millimeter-sized, spherical silicate grains formed by the rapid cooling of molten droplets in the early solar nebula approximately 4.56 billion years ago.[1] These meteorites represent some of the oldest and least altered materials in the solar system, originating from asteroids in the main asteroid belt and providing direct evidence of the conditions during the protoplanetary disk's evolution.[2] Chondrites comprise over 85% of all meteorites recovered on Earth and are distinguished from achondrites by their undifferentiated composition, lacking the effects of significant melting or planetary differentiation.[3] Structurally, chondrites consist of three primary components: chondrules (making up 20–80% of the volume, depending on the type), a fine-grained silicate matrix that binds the chondrules, and calcium-aluminum-rich inclusions (CAIs), which are the oldest known solids in the solar system at about 4.567 billion years old.[3] Their bulk composition is dominated by silicate minerals such as olivine and pyroxene, along with iron-nickel metal grains, sulfides, and in some cases, organic compounds and water-bearing minerals; this mirrors the elemental abundances in the Sun's photosphere, underscoring their primitive nature.[2] The matrix is typically porous and dark, while the overall density ranges from 2.7 to 3.9 g/cm³, similar to common terrestrial rocks.[3] Chondrites are classified into several major groups based on their mineralogy, oxidation state, and degree of thermal processing: ordinary chondrites (subdivided into H, L, and LL types, which are the most common), carbonaceous chondrites (including CI, CM, CV, and CO groups, rich in carbon and volatiles), and enstatite chondrites (EH and EL, formed under highly reducing conditions).[4] These groups reflect origins from distinct parent bodies, with carbonaceous chondrites often preserving presolar grains and amino acids, offering key insights into the delivery of organic material to early Earth.[5] Equilibrated chondrites show signs of heating and mineral homogenization, while unequilibrated ones retain original textures from their formation.[3]

Definition and Characteristics

Chondrules and Texture

Chondrules are millimeter-sized, rounded beads primarily composed of silicate minerals, exhibiting textures indicative of rapid cooling from a once-molten state as droplets in the early solar nebula.[6] These structures, typically ranging from 0.1 to 5 mm in diameter, are the defining feature of chondritic meteorites and give the class its name, derived from the Ancient Greek word chondros, meaning "grain" or "seed," coined by geologist Gustav Rose in reference to their granular appearance.[7] Chondrules display a variety of textural types based on their internal structure and mineral arrangement, with porphyritic being the most prevalent across most chondrites. Porphyritic chondrules feature coarse phenocrysts of olivine and/or pyroxene embedded in a finer-grained, glassy or microcrystalline mesostasis.[8] Barred chondrules, in contrast, contain parallel, elongated bars of olivine that formed through directional solidification, often with pyroxene in the mesostasis.[9] Radial chondrules exhibit radiating arrays of pyroxene fibers or needles, suggesting rapid crystallization from a supercooled melt.[10] These textural distinctions reflect differences in cooling rates and nucleation processes, though the dominant minerals—olivine ((Mg,Fe)2SiO4) and pyroxene (e.g., enstatite or augite)—are common to all types.[11] The textural arrangement of chondrules within chondrites contributes to the overall matrix-dominated fabric, where individual or clustered chondrules are embedded in a fine-grained silicate matrix. Clustered, or compound, chondrules—formed by the fusion of two or more during accretion—occur in up to 5-10% of cases and highlight dynamic assembly processes in the solar nebula.[12] Interfaces between chondrules and the matrix often preserve delicate boundaries with adhering fine dust, preserving evidence of minimal post-accretionary alteration in primitive examples.[13] Calcium-aluminum-rich inclusions (CAIs), another primitive component, coexist with chondrules as irregular or rounded refractory objects, adding to the heterogeneous texture.[14] In ordinary chondrites, chondrules constitute 20-80% of the volume, dominating the texture compared to lower abundances (typically <20%) in carbonaceous chondrites.[15]

Physical Properties

Chondrite meteorites exhibit a range of physical properties that reflect their primitive origins and atmospheric entry experiences. Observed falls typically yield fragments ranging from 1 cm to several meters in diameter, often breaking apart during descent due to the stresses of atmospheric friction.[16] These specimens commonly feature a thin fusion crust, formed by melting and ablation during entry, which appears as a dark, glassy to rough black coating, typically 0.1 to 1 mm thick, covering the exterior surface.[17] The bulk density of chondrites varies between approximately 1.5 and 3.8 g/cm³, influenced primarily by porosity differences among groups; for instance, carbonaceous chondrites often have lower densities (1.5–3.0 g/cm³) owing to higher porosity levels up to 40%, while ordinary chondrites are denser (2.7–3.7 g/cm³) with porosities generally 5-20%.[18] In terms of appearance, ordinary chondrites display a characteristic gray color in their interiors, whereas carbonaceous chondrites tend toward black or dark hues due to their fine-grained matrix; many chondrites, particularly regolith breccias, show brecciated textures with embedded clasts of varying sizes and compositions, giving a heterogeneous, fragmented look.[3] This brecciation contributes to a mottled or clastic structure observable on cut surfaces. Mechanically, carbonaceous chondrites are notably friable and prone to crumbling under handling, contrasting with the greater cohesion and durability of ordinary chondrites, which resist fragmentation more effectively.[19] Chondrites also possess magnetic susceptibility attributable to metallic iron-nickel grains, with values typically in the range of log χ = 4.1 to 5.3 (in 10⁻⁹ m³/kg units), enabling non-destructive classification and identification in the field or laboratory.[18] The overall grainy texture, arising from embedded chondrules, imparts a distinctive tactile feel to larger specimens.[20]

Classification

Ordinary Chondrites

Ordinary chondrites represent the most abundant group of chondritic meteorites, comprising approximately 80% of all observed meteorite falls and over 90% of all chondrites.[21] They are distinguished by their relatively high iron content compared to other chondrite groups, with subgroups classified as H (high total iron), L (low total iron), and LL (lowest total iron and metallic iron content).[21] These classifications are based primarily on bulk iron concentrations and the proportion of metallic phases, with H chondrites containing about 27 wt% total iron, L around 22 wt%, and LL about 19-22 wt%.[21] Ordinary chondrites are frequent fall events, accounting for the majority of documented meteorite recoveries on Earth.[22] A defining characteristic of ordinary chondrites is their predominantly equilibrated textures, with most specimens classified as petrologic types 4-6, reflecting thermal metamorphism that homogenizes mineral compositions.[23] Chondrules are a major component, typically comprising 65-75 vol% in less metamorphosed examples, embedded in a finer-grained matrix.[24] The group features prominent metallic iron-nickel alloys, including kamacite (low-nickel) and taenite (high-nickel), which occur as distinct grains or in plessite intergrowths, contributing to their overall iron-rich nature.[25] These metals vary in abundance across subgroups, with H chondrites having the highest metallic content (around 15-20 vol%) and LL the lowest (3-5 vol%).[25] Ordinary chondrites are closely linked to S-type asteroids, the most common asteroid spectral type in the inner solar system. Samples returned by the Japanese Hayabusa mission from the S-type asteroid (25143) Itokawa in 2010 closely match LL chondrites in mineralogy, oxygen isotopes, and trace elements, confirming that such asteroids are primary sources of this meteorite group.[26] A historical example is the Forest City meteorite, an H5 ordinary chondrite that fell on May 2, 1890, in Iowa, USA, with a total known mass of 152 kg recovered over a strewn field spanning several kilometers.[27]

Carbonaceous Chondrites

Carbonaceous chondrites represent a diverse class of primitive meteorites characterized by their enrichment in volatiles and organics, primarily originating from C-type asteroids in the outer solar nebula. These meteorites are distinguished by their low metal content, typically less than 5 volume percent, compared to more iron-rich groups, reflecting formation conditions cooler and farther from the Sun.[28] They comprise approximately 4.4% of observed meteorite falls, underscoring their rarity despite their importance in understanding early solar system chemistry.[29] The subgroups of carbonaceous chondrites include CI, CM, CV, CO, CK, CR, and CH, each defined by distinct petrographic and chemical signatures.[28] CI chondrites are matrix-dominated with virtually no chondrules, consisting almost entirely of fine-grained, altered material that preserves a record of pristine solar nebula dust.[30] CM chondrites are notably hydrated, containing up to 15.6 weight percent water bound in phyllosilicates, along with significant aqueous alteration products.[31] CV chondrites feature large porphyritic chondrules, often dominated by olivine and pyroxene, set in a coarser matrix than other subgroups.[32] The CO, CK, CR, and CH subgroups exhibit varying degrees of chondrule abundance and oxidation states, with CR and CH showing metal-rich chondrules and higher matrix fractions in some cases.[28] A hallmark of carbonaceous chondrites is their elevated carbon content, reaching up to 3 weight percent in forms such as carbonates, organics, and graphite, which contrasts with the depletions seen in other chondrite classes.[33] This volatile enrichment, including water in hydrated varieties like CM up to approximately 20 weight percent in some analyses, highlights their role as carriers of outer solar system materials.[31] The 1969 Allende fall, a CV3 carbonaceous chondrite, exemplifies their significance, yielding over 2 metric tons of material and providing key samples for studying primitive inclusions.[34] A 2025 study on 23 Antarctic CM chondrites from the Meteorite Hills region identified pairing among 15 samples, suggesting they originate from a single heterogeneous fall event involving fragmentation, enhancing our understanding of parent body breakup and recovery biases.[35] The matrix in hydrated carbonaceous chondrites, such as CI and CM, is fine-grained and phyllosilicate-rich, comprising up to 70 volume percent of the meteorite and dominated by serpentine-group minerals that formed through low-temperature processes.[36] These matrices host trace organics, whose presence suggests potential links to prebiotic chemistry in the early solar system.[37]

Enstatite Chondrites

Enstatite chondrites represent a rare class of highly reduced, anhydrous meteorites characterized by their formation under extremely low oxygen fugacity conditions in the inner solar nebula. These meteorites are dominated by enstatite (MgSiO₃), the primary silicate mineral typically comprising 40–60 volume percent, alongside significant abundances of metal and sulfides.[38][39] Unlike more oxidized chondrite groups, enstatite chondrites lack free oxide minerals, reflecting an anoxic environment where oxygen was scarce, leading to the incorporation of silicon into metallic phases at levels of 2–6 weight percent.[38][39] The group is divided into two main subgroups based on total iron and metal content: EH chondrites, with higher iron (averaging ~30 weight percent total Fe, including ~5 weight percent as sulfides), and EL chondrites, with lower iron (~25 weight percent total Fe). Key accessory minerals include oldhamite (CaS) and daubreelite ((Fe,Mn)Cr₂S₄), which are sulfides indicative of the reducing conditions, as well as troilite (FeS) and Fe-Ni metal. Most enstatite chondrites are equilibrated, belonging to petrologic types 4–6, though rare unequilibrated type 3 examples exist.[38][38][38] Enstatite chondrites comprise less than 2 percent of all known chondrites and are predominantly meteorite finds rather than observed falls, highlighting their scarcity in collections. A notable exception is the Abee EH4 chondrite, which fell on June 9, 1952, in Alberta, Canada, producing a 107 kg mass recovered from a 1.8-meter-deep crater. Recent dynamical modeling identifies their source regions in the inner main asteroid belt near the 3:1 Kirkwood gap at approximately 2.5 AU, distinct from the origins of other chondrite classes, consistent with their formation in the innermost protoplanetary disk.[40][29]

Other Groups

Rumuruti (R) chondrites represent a distinct group of highly oxidized chondrites characterized by abundant iron-rich olivine (Fa ~30–40 mol%) and minimal free metal or sulfide, with opaque phases dominated by magnetite, pentlandite, and troilite.[41] These meteorites exhibit a high matrix abundance (40–50 vol%) and equilibrated to unequilibrated textures, often showing evidence of shock metamorphism such as planar fractures in olivine.[42] Approximately 100 R chondrites are known, primarily finds from hot deserts, with Rumuruti being the sole observed fall in 1934.[43] Spectrally, R chondrites match R-type asteroids, suggesting an origin from such bodies in the inner asteroid belt.[44] Kakangari (K) chondrites form a rare grouplet, with only three recognized members: Kakangari, LEW 87232, and Lea County 002, all unequilibrated type 3 specimens. They display transitional properties between ordinary and carbonaceous chondrites, featuring high matrix contents (33–77 vol%), metal abundances similar to H-group ordinary chondrites (6–10 vol%), and chondrules rich in forsterite (Fo >95) alongside enstatite.[45] Oxygen isotopic compositions plot near the terrestrial fractionation line, intermediate between carbonaceous and ordinary groups, supporting their unique nebular setting.[46] Recent provisional groups include the CY chondrites, a thermally altered subset of carbonaceous chondrites defined by high-temperature metamorphism (>500°C) and dehydration of hydrous precursors like CI chondrites.[47] The Northwest Africa (NWA) 4757 meteorite exemplifies this group, classified as CY2 with ~95 vol% fine-grained matrix, rare pseudomorphic chondrules, and abundant sulfides (~20 vol%).[48] A 2025 study revealed its 16O-poor oxygen isotopes (δ¹⁸O = 23.83‰, δ¹⁷O = 12.84‰, Δ¹⁷O = 0.45‰), the heaviest among CY samples, indicating intensive aqueous alteration followed by thermal overprint up to ~750–800°C.[48] In 2024, refinements to the secondary classification of unequilibrated chondrites proposed a unified two-dimensional scheme using metamorphic (M) and aqueous alteration (A) scales, applicable to minor groups like R and K.[49] The M scale, based on the fayalite ratio in chondrules (m = Fa_I / Fa_II), spans M0.0–M1.0 for types 3.0–4, with R chondrites adapted via whole-rock olivine dispersion and K chondrites assigned subtypes like 3.9 based on low Fa variability.[49] The A scale quantifies phyllosilicate fraction (0–100%), typically A0.0 for dry R and K types but allowing minor hydration in brecciated samples.[49] This framework harmonizes prior schemes across groups, enabling precise petrologic assessment without group-specific adjustments.[50]

Composition

Mineralogy

Chondrites are characterized by a diverse array of primary silicate minerals, with olivine ((Mg,Fe)₂SiO₄) being one of the most abundant phases across various groups. In ordinary chondrites, olivine typically exhibits a fayalite content (Fa, where Fa = 100 × Fe/(Fe+Mg)) ranging from Fa₁₀ to Fa₄₀, reflecting compositional variations among H (Fa≈₁₉), L (Fa≈₂₄), and LL (Fa≈₃₂) subtypes.[51] Pyroxene, another key silicate, dominates in enstatite chondrites as low-calcium enstatite (MgSiO₃), which is nearly iron-free and forms the primary host mineral in these highly reduced meteorites.[52] Plagioclase feldspar (NaAlSi₃O₈–CaAl₂Si₂O₈), often as sodic varieties, occurs as a minor to accessory phase in chondrules and matrix throughout chondrite groups, contributing to their felsic components.[53] Metallic iron-nickel alloys and sulfide minerals are prominent opaque phases that distinguish chondrite reduction states. In ordinary chondrites, kamacite (low-Ni Fe-Ni alloy, typically 4–7 wt% Ni) and taenite (high-Ni Fe-Ni alloy, >20 wt% Ni) form interstitial grains and chondrule rims, comprising up to 20 vol% in H-group samples.[54] Enstatite chondrites feature troilite (FeS) as the dominant sulfide, often intergrown with oldhamite (CaS), a calcium sulfide unique to these reduced assemblages due to the availability of sulfur and calcium under low-oxygen conditions.[53] The abundance of troilite correlates with the overall reduction state of chondrite groups, being more prevalent in reduced environments where iron is partitioned into sulfides rather than oxides or silicates.[55] In carbonaceous chondrites, opaque phases include magnetite (Fe₃O₄) and chromite (FeCr₂O₄), which occur as fine-grained inclusions in chondrules and matrix, reflecting higher oxidation levels compared to ordinary or enstatite groups. Magnetite forms polygonal or framboidal grains up to several micrometers in size, particularly abundant in CV and CK subtypes.[56] Chromite appears as euhedral crystals within type II chondrules, often associated with pyroxene and olivine.[57] Secondary minerals in chondrites arise from low-temperature processes and include serpentine-group phyllosilicates ((Mg,Fe)₃Si₂O₅(OH)₄) and saponite (a smectite clay, Na₀.₃(Mg,Fe)₃(Si,Al)₄O₁₀(OH)₂·nH₂O), primarily observed in carbonaceous groups like CM and CI. These hydrous phases replace primary silicates, with serpentine forming fibrous or platy textures and saponite occurring as interlayered structures.[58] In chondrules, minerals such as olivine often develop barred or porphyritic textures with Fe-rich rims.[53]

Bulk Chemistry and Isotopes

Chondrites exhibit bulk elemental compositions that closely approximate solar abundances for refractory elements, with CI chondrites serving as the primary reference standard due to their minimal fractionation relative to the solar photosphere, excluding highly volatile gases like H, He, N, and noble gases.[59] This solar-like pattern in CI chondrites includes refractory lithophile elements such as Al, Ca, and REEs at near-CI levels across most groups, while moderately volatile elements like Na and K show progressive depletions in ordinary chondrites, with Na abundances ~0.8–0.9 × CI and K ~0.6–0.7 × CI, reflecting nebular processing or parent body effects.[60] Enstatite chondrites display further depletions in lithophile elements but enrichments in siderophiles due to reduced conditions.[61] Total iron content in chondrites ranges from approximately 15 to 30 wt%, varying by group, with ordinary chondrites showing H-group at ~25–27 wt% Fe, L-group at ~20–22 wt%, and LL-group at ~19 wt%; carbonaceous chondrites typically have 18–25 wt% Fe, predominantly oxidized in silicates and oxides; and enstatite chondrites reach up to 30 wt% Fe, largely as metal.[62] Iron partitioning distinguishes groups: metallic Fe-Ni is abundant (15–20 wt%) in reduced enstatite and H chondrites, whereas oxidized Fe (as FeO in silicates or magnetite) dominates in carbonaceous chondrites like CI and CM, comprising >90% of total Fe.[63] These variations in oxidation state reflect diverse nebular redox environments.[64] Oxygen isotope compositions, plotted as δ¹⁷O versus δ¹⁸O, reveal group-specific signatures on the three-isotope diagram, where the Terrestrial Fractionation Line (TFL) has a slope of ~0.52 due to mass-dependent fractionation, while carbonaceous chondrites define the Carbonaceous Chondrite Anhydrous Mineral (CCAM) line with a slope of ~0.94, indicating mixing with ¹⁶O-rich reservoirs.[65] Ordinary chondrites plot near the TFL with δ¹⁷O ≈ 0‰, enstatite chondrites show slight ¹⁶O enrichment (δ¹⁷O ≈ -0.5‰), and CI chondrites are notably ¹⁶O-rich with δ¹⁷O ≈ -3 to -5‰, highlighting isotopic heterogeneity in the solar nebula.[66] Primitive chondrule minerals align along a slope-1 line, representing unfractionated nebular compositions.[67] Other isotopic systems, such as Cr and Ti, exhibit anomalies that underscore nebular heterogeneity: carbonaceous chondrites show variable ε⁵⁴Cr (from -1 to +1) and ε⁵⁰Ti (up to ±5), with correlations indicating distinct reservoirs, while ordinary chondrites have more uniform values near zero, suggesting less mixing.[68] These anomalies arise from nucleosynthetic variations or early condensation processes.[69] Recent analysis of 2025 Chang'e-6 lunar samples identified CI-like impactor relics with δ¹⁷O ≈ -5‰, confirming delivery of primitive carbonaceous material to the Moon.[70]

Petrologic Types and Metamorphism

Unequilibrated Types (3.0-3.9)

Unequilibrated chondrites, classified as petrologic type 3, represent the least thermally processed members of the chondrite family, characterized by minimal metamorphic alteration that preserves the original heterogeneity of their mineral assemblages and retention of volatile elements. These meteorites are subdivided into subtypes ranging from 3.0, the most primitive with negligible thermal effects, to 3.9, which shows slightly more advanced but still limited equilibration. This scale reflects progressive, low-level thermal processing on their parent bodies, without significant homogenization of compositions or loss of primordial signatures.[49] Key features of type 3 chondrites include highly variable mineral compositions, such as unequilibrated olivine exhibiting zoning in iron content (Fa, or fayalite mole percent) from near 0 to approximately 50, often with reverse or normal zoning patterns that indicate incomplete diffusion during formation or early alteration. The fine-grained matrix surrounding chondrules displays pronounced chemical and textural heterogeneity, comprising amorphous silicates, sulfides, and minor metals that retain nebular dust signatures. Additionally, these chondrites host abundant presolar grains—nanoscale silicates and oxides predating the solar system—surviving due to the low temperatures (typically below 300–400°C) experienced post-accretion, providing direct evidence of interstellar heritage. Recent studies as of 2025 highlight metasomatic alteration influencing mineral mobility in type 3 ordinary and carbonaceous chondrites.[71][72][73][74] Representative examples include Semarkona, an LL3.0 ordinary chondrite recognized as one of the most primitive unequilibrated ordinary chondrites due to its sharp chondrule-matrix boundaries, diverse olivine compositions, and minimal secondary minerals. Another prominent case is Allende, a CV3 carbonaceous chondrite, which exemplifies unequilibrated features through heterogeneous olivine zoning in chondrules and a matrix rich in calcium-aluminum-rich inclusions, despite some localized oxidation. Such type 3 chondrites are especially common among carbonaceous groups, where primitive textures are more readily preserved.[75][76] A recent advancement in classification, proposed in 2024, introduces a secondary metamorphic scale (M0.0 to M0.9) specifically for type 3 chondrites, quantifying mineral equilibration through metrics like the relative standard deviation of Fa in olivine and structural ordering in phyllosilicates, allowing finer resolution of subtle thermal histories.[49] These unequilibrated types serve as critical records of early solar nebula conditions, capturing the compositional diversity of dust and gas at the time of chondrule formation and accretion, before significant parent body processing erased such details.

Equilibrated Types (4-6)

Equilibrated chondrites, classified as petrologic types 4 through 6, represent stages of increasing thermal metamorphism on parent bodies, where mineral compositions homogenize due to solid-state diffusion and recrystallization.[77] These types evolve from unequilibrated type 3 precursors through progressive heating, leading to the loss of primary chemical and textural variability.[77] Type 4 chondrites exhibit partial equilibration, with the matrix fully recrystallized into equigranular silicates while chondrules remain distinct, and olivine compositions show reduced variability (e.g., standard deviation <5% in fayalite content).[77] In ordinary chondrites, this stage features uniform olivine with approximately Fa19 in H-group examples, alongside early homogenization of pyroxenes.[78] Metasomatic processes during the type 3-4 transition in ordinary chondrites involve localized mobility of Na and Ca, promoting albitization and secondary mineral formation such as nepheline and sodalite.[74] Estimated peak temperatures for type 4 range from 550–750°C, based on mineral stability fields and diffusion rates.[79] Type 5 chondrites display full silicate equilibration, where the matrix integrates with chondrule material, resulting in a more uniform texture and complete homogenization of olivine and low-calcium pyroxene compositions across the meteorite.[77] Metal grains and troilite sulfides coarsen, forming veins up to 120 μm in size, indicative of enhanced diffusion and annealing.[77] Temperatures during this stage are estimated at 700–850°C, allowing widespread Fe-Mg exchange between phases like olivine and spinel.[79] In type 6 chondrites, the highest degree of thermal metamorphism occurs, with plagioclase fully equilibrated to sodic compositions (An10-12) and small chondrules losing distinct boundaries.[77] The matrix is thoroughly recrystallized, and opaque phases show pronounced coarsening with prominent metal-sulfide networks.[77] Peak temperatures approach 900–950°C, nearing the onset of plagioclase incongruent melting at 1050–1100°C in some cases.[80][77] Many observed falls of ordinary chondrites, such as over 70% of L-group examples, are type 5 or 6, reflecting their prevalence due to deeper burial in parent bodies during metamorphism.

Formation and Origin

Chondrule Formation

Chondrules formed through transient heating events in the protoplanetary disk that melted dust aggregates to temperatures of approximately 1500–2000 K for durations ranging from seconds to hours, allowing for partial or complete melting followed by rapid cooling.[8] These events produced igneous textures indicative of crystallization from a melt, such as porphyritic structures dominated by phenocrysts in a glassy or microcrystalline groundmass, which comprise about 84% of chondrules in ordinary chondrites.[81] Compositional evidence includes volatile element depletions, notably sodium (Na), resulting from evaporation during heating, though partial recondensation during cooling can mitigate this loss.[8] Several astrophysical models explain these heating mechanisms. Nebular shocks, propagating through the disk at velocities of Mach 7–9 near 1 AU, are a leading hypothesis, potentially triggered by gravitational instabilities or bow shocks around planetesimals, providing the necessary thermal profiles for chondrule production.[8] Planetesimal collisions represent another mechanism, particularly for distinct chondrule populations like those in CB and CH chondrites, where high-velocity impacts (~5 Ma after CAI formation) generate molten ejecta.[8] X-ray flares from the young Sun, as modeled in magnetohydrodynamic simulations, could induce shock waves in the upper nebula layers, heating dust to chondrule-forming conditions over the observed age range.[82] Radiometric dating using the Al-Mg system indicates that chondrule formation occurred 1–3 million years after calcium-aluminum-rich inclusions (CAIs), the earliest solar system solids, constraining the events to a brief epoch in disk evolution.[81] This timing aligns with dynamical models like the Grand Tack scenario, where Jupiter's inward-then-outward migration generates recurrent shock bursts capable of widespread chondrule production.[81] Chondrule diversity reflects variations in cooling rates post-melting. Porphyritic chondrules, formed under slower cooling (10–1000 K/h), exhibit large olivine or pyroxene phenocrysts, while barred olivine chondrules arise from more rapid cooling (up to 3000 K/h), producing aligned crystal bars.[8] These textural differences underscore the episodic nature of formation events across the disk.[81]

Accretion into Parent Bodies

Following chondrule formation, chondritic materials accreted into parent bodies through hierarchical aggregation processes involving dust and fine-grained matrix surrounding chondrules as primary building blocks. This began with the formation of fluffy matrix aggregates that collided with and adhered to chondrules, creating compound aggregates in dense protoplanetary disk regions. Numerical models of fluffy aggregate growth demonstrate that these collisions in clumps with densities around 10^{-4} g cm^{-3} lead to layered structures, where matrix forms rims ~100-200 μm thick around individual chondrules, eventually building larger, inhomogeneous bodies with chondrule-rich cores and matrix-enriched surfaces.[83] A unifying model proposes that radial transport in the disk facilitated mass redistribution, allowing chondrules and matrix to co-accrete efficiently despite their differing origins, with significant turbulent mixing ensuring compositional homogeneity on kilometer scales.[84] Streaming instability in pressure bumps near the water ice line played a key role in concentrating these dust-matrix aggregates into gravitationally bound planetesimals, preferentially incorporating larger, aerodynamically decoupled grains like chondrules over finer matrix. This mechanism explains the observed isotopic diversity in carbonaceous chondrites, as local variations in dust supply led to differences in refractory inclusion and chondrule abundances (e.g., 2-4% refractory inclusions in CM chondrites vs. 3-8% in CV/CO types). Accretion occurred rapidly within 1-5 million years after calcium-aluminum-rich inclusion (CAI) formation, as constrained by manganese-chromium (Mn-Cr) isotope systematics in meteorites, which record early aqueous activity shortly after assembly; for instance, ordinary chondrite parent bodies accreted around 2-4 Ma after CAIs, while carbonaceous types formed slightly later at ~3-5 Ma.[85][86][87] Chondrite parent bodies were typically small asteroids 10-100 km in diameter, remaining largely undifferentiated due to insufficient heat from short-lived radionuclides like ^{26}Al to fully melt their interiors, preserving primitive chondritic compositions. However, some, particularly carbonaceous chondrite (CC) parent bodies, show evidence of partial differentiation, with metallic cores forming but interrupted by impacts that created breccias—polymict mixtures of chondritic and achondritic clasts from collisional disruption and reaccretion. A 2025 study on iron meteorites from CC-like parent bodies reveals protracted core formation spanning ~3-3.6 Ma after CAIs, where initial sulfur-rich protocores segregated early but were disrupted by collisions within 1-2.5 Ma, delaying full differentiation as sulfur-poor residues reformed second-generation cores under renewed radiogenic heating.[88][89] In contrast, most ordinary chondrite parent bodies accreted as undifferentiated rubble piles, with breccias arising from later impacts that excavated and mixed subsurface materials without triggering widespread melting.[90]

Aqueous Alteration and Volatiles

Hydrous Minerals and Water Content

Chondrites, particularly carbonaceous varieties such as CI and CM types, contain hydrous minerals that provide key evidence for the incorporation of water during their formation. These minerals primarily include serpentine-group phyllosilicates, chlorite, and smectites like saponite, which dominate the fine-grained matrix in CM chondrites and form intergrowths in CI chondrites.[30][91] The presence of these phases indicates hydration levels up to 20 wt% H₂O in CI and CM chondrites, with CI reaching 18–21 wt% and CM typically 3–10 wt%, reflecting varying degrees of aqueous interaction on their parent bodies.[91][92] The water incorporated into these minerals likely originated from cometary ices or nebular sources, accreted onto parent bodies at temperatures below 270 K where water ice remained stable.[93] This low-temperature accretion preserved volatile components, as evidenced by the structural hydroxyl groups in the hydrous phases. Water content is quantified through methods such as loss on ignition (LOI), which measures mass loss from dehydroxylation upon heating to 1000°C, and Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy, which identifies OH-stretching bands around 2.7–3.0 μm to distinguish structural water from adsorbed moisture.[94][95] In CV and CO chondrites, metasomatic alteration has produced secondary phyllosilicates from fluid interactions, as detailed in a 2025 review of type 3 carbonaceous chondrites.[74] Hydration enhances porosity in these meteorites, with CI chondrites exhibiting up to 35% porosity compared to lower values in less hydrated types, contributing to their friable texture and poor lithification.[96] This increased porosity arises from the volume expansion during mineral hydration, making the material more susceptible to mechanical breakdown. Isotopic signatures, such as D/H enrichment in the hydrous phases, further support nebular or cometary origins but are secondary to the mineralogical evidence here.[97]

Isotopic Evidence for Water

Isotopic analyses of hydrogen and oxygen in chondrites reveal key insights into the origins and processing of water during aqueous alteration on parent bodies. The deuterium-to-hydrogen (D/H) ratios in hydrous minerals, such as phyllosilicates, are notably elevated compared to the Vienna Standard Mean Ocean Water (VSMOW) standard, with δD values typically ranging from 150‰ to 3000‰. These high ratios arise from low-temperature isotopic exchange between anhydrous silicates and water or from incorporation of D-enriched material, potentially from cometary sources in the outer Solar System. For instance, in unequilibrated ordinary chondrites like Semarkona, δD values in matrix phyllosilicates reach 798–1209‰, far exceeding the protosolar nebula's estimated δD value of approximately -850‰ (corresponding to a D/H ratio of ~2 × 10^{-5}).[98][99] Oxygen isotope systematics further trace the composition and evolution of the altering fluids. In CM carbonaceous chondrites, aqueous alteration imparts positive Δ¹⁷O shifts of around +1‰ in bulk compositions and secondary phases like carbonates and sulfates, indicating interaction with ¹⁷O-enriched water at temperatures below 150°C. This enrichment reflects closed-system exchange where the fluid progressively incorporates heavier isotopes from the rock, starting from an initial ¹⁶O-rich reservoir. Stepwise heating experiments on hydrogen isotopes corroborate these findings, showing distinct release patterns: low-temperature steps (200–400°C) liberate D-enriched hydrogen primarily from loosely bound water and organics, while higher-temperature steps (500–900°C) release hydrogen from structurally bound sites in hydrous minerals, revealing a heterogeneous distribution of water components with varying D/H ratios. In CM chondrites, these patterns indicate D/H values increasing from ~100‰ in early-released fractions to over 1000‰ in mineral-hosted water.[100][101][101] Recent experimental work highlights the role of reducing environments in shaping hydrogen isotopes, particularly in enstatite chondrites. Under H₂-rich atmospheres simulating early planetesimal conditions, FeS in chondritic materials reduces to metallic iron and H₂S at temperatures around 600°C. This mechanism helps explain the notably low δD values (near 0‰) observed in enstatite chondrite hydrous phases, contrasting with the elevated ratios in other groups and linking to minimal aqueous processing in inner Solar System reservoirs. Collectively, these isotopic signatures point to the existence of ¹⁸O-poor (¹⁶O-enriched) water reservoirs in the protoplanetary disk, likely from regions closer to the Sun where less fractionated water dominated, influencing the delivery and alteration of volatiles to chondrite parent bodies.[102][103]

Organic Matter and Presolar Components

Carbonaceous Organics

Carbonaceous chondrites host a variety of organic compounds, dominated by insoluble macromolecular carbon (IOM), which constitutes the majority of the total organic content and can reach up to 2 wt% in these meteorites.[104] This IOM is a complex, kerogen-like polymer rich in aromatic and aliphatic structures, often comprising over 70% of the bulk organic matter.[105] Soluble components include polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), such as naphthalene and phenanthrene, extracted via solvents and representing a minor but diverse fraction.[106] Additionally, amino acids like glycine have been identified in notable abundances, particularly in the Murchison meteorite, where they occur alongside other prebiotically relevant molecules.[107] These organics are primarily concentrated in the fine-grained matrix of carbonaceous chondrites, especially in CM and CI groups, where they can account for several weight percent of the matrix material.[108] In contrast, ordinary chondrites contain significantly less organic carbon, typically less than 1 wt%, with IOM limited to around 0.7 wt% or lower due to their distinct parent body environments.[109] This distribution highlights the matrix as a key reservoir for preserving these compounds during accretion and alteration processes. The formation of carbonaceous organics in chondrites is attributed to abiotic processes in the protoplanetary nebula or on parent bodies, including ion irradiation and ultraviolet (UV) photolysis of simple precursor gases like methane and carbon monoxide.[37] Ion irradiation experiments replicate the aromatic-rich IOM structures observed in meteorites, suggesting energetic particle bombardment in the solar nebula contributed to polymerization.[110] Similarly, UV photolysis is proposed to generate PAHs and aliphatic components through the breakdown and recombination of volatile organics in icy mantles or gas phases.[111] A 2025 experimental study on shock-recovered chondrite samples demonstrated that impact-induced oxidation significantly increases carbonyl group formation in organics, particularly in carbonaceous types, providing a mechanism to explain the observed chemical diversity and oxidation states in meteoritic matter.[112] This process involves rapid heating and oxidation during collisions, altering the functional groups without complete destruction. Notably, certain amino acids in chondrites exhibit chirality, with isovaline showing an L-enantiomer excess of up to 18% in the Murchison meteorite, indicating asymmetric synthesis or selection during formation.[113] This enantiomeric bias, observed across multiple carbonaceous samples, underscores potential pathways for molecular asymmetry in early solar system chemistry.[114] Samples from asteroid Bennu, returned by NASA's OSIRIS-REx mission in 2023, contain abundant nitrogen-rich soluble organic matter, including ammonia and more carbon and nitrogen than comparable Ryugu samples or most meteorites, as reported in 2025 analyses.[115]

Presolar Grains

Presolar grains represent the oldest known solid material in the Solar System, consisting of microscopic dust particles that condensed in the atmospheres or ejecta of stars billions of years before the formation of the Sun and planets. These grains, with sizes typically ranging from 0.1 to several micrometers, are embedded within the fine-grained, amorphous matrix of primitive chondrites, where they escaped destruction during the high-temperature processes of the solar nebula. Their preservation is most evident in unequilibrated chondrites, such as petrologic type 3 ordinary and carbonaceous varieties, which have undergone minimal thermal alteration.[116] Identification of presolar grains relies on their extreme isotopic anomalies, detected via secondary ion mass spectrometry (SIMS) or NanoSIMS ion microprobes, which reveal compositions incompatible with Solar System formation mechanisms. For instance, carbon isotopes in many grains show δ¹³C values exceeding -1000‰, far outside the typical solar range of -50‰ to +50‰. Similarly, oxygen isotopes display enrichments or depletions in ¹⁷O and ¹⁸O by factors of 10 to 1000 relative to ¹⁶O. These signatures allow classification into subtypes, providing insights into diverse stellar environments.[116] The primary types of presolar grains in chondrites are silicon carbide (SiC), graphite, diamond, and oxides, each with distinct mineralogies and isotopic characteristics. SiC grains, often sub-micrometer to 10 μm in diameter, dominate the inventory and are subdivided into mainstream (s-process enriched in heavy elements like Sr and Ba), Type X (¹⁵N-rich, supernova-derived), and rarer nova or Type Y/Z subtypes from asymptotic giant branch (AGB) stars. Graphite grains, typically 2-4 μm, include low-density variants with ¹⁸O excesses indicative of supernovae and high-density ones linked to AGB stars via s-process signatures. Nanodiamonds, abundant at ~400-1400 ppm, carry noble gases like Xe-HL from r- and p-process nucleosynthesis, likely originating from supernovae. Oxide grains, such as corundum (Al₂O₃), spinel (MgAl₂O₄), and hibonite (CaAl₁₂O₁₉), are 0.1-1 μm in size and classified into groups based on oxygen isotopes: Group 1 shows ¹⁷O enrichment from low-mass AGB stars or red giants; Group 2 features ¹⁸O depletion from supernovae; and Group 3 exhibits depletion in both, also supernova-linked.[116] Abundances of these grains are low but vary by type and host meteorite, reaching 1-100 ppm in the most pristine unequilibrated chondrites; for example, presolar SiC occurs at ~10-30 ppm, oxides at up to ~100 ppm, graphite at ~1-5 ppm, and diamonds at higher levels of 400-1000 ppm. These concentrations decrease in more equilibrated chondrites due to thermal processing on parent bodies. The grains' origins trace to stellar sources predating the Solar System by more than 4.6 billion years, with AGB stars contributing the majority of SiC, graphite, and oxide grains through slow neutron capture (s-process) and oxygen-rich outflows, while supernovae provide the remainder via explosive nucleosynthesis. Radiogenic isotopes like ²⁶Al (with initial ratios up to 0.005 in oxides) further confirm formation in young, evolving stars.[117][116] Recent studies have refined the stellar origins of presolar oxides, linking them to oxygen-rich AGB stars through detailed modeling of isotopic anomalies, particularly enrichments in ¹⁷O relative to ¹⁸O that match predicted dredge-up processes in these stars. For example, analyses of grains from aqueously altered chondrite analogs like those from asteroid Ryugu reveal oxygen isotope ratios (δ¹⁷O up to +1000‰ and δ¹⁸O varying from -100‰ to +500‰) consistent with low-metallicity AGB environments. Their survival is attributed to encapsulation in refractory matrix materials, shielding them from evaporation or reaction during the ~1500 K heating in the protoplanetary disk, allowing incorporation into chondrite parent bodies around 4.567 Gyr ago.[118][117] Analyses of Bennu samples as of 2025 have identified presolar SiC, graphite, and O-rich grains, confirming the presence of stardust predating the solar system in these primitive materials.[119]

Parent Body Associations

Ordinary chondrites, comprising H, L, and LL groups, are primarily associated with S-type asteroids in the inner main belt, based on spectral similarities in silicate mineralogy and confirmed by sample returns. The Hayabusa mission's analysis of particles from asteroid (25143) Itokawa revealed compositions matching LL chondrites, including equilibrated olivine and pyroxene abundances, establishing a direct link between S-type asteroids and ordinary chondrites. Carbonaceous chondrites, including CM and CI subtypes, correspond to C-type asteroids, with spectral features indicating hydrated silicates and organic-rich surfaces. Samples from asteroid (162173) Ryugu, returned by the Hayabusa2 mission, exhibit mineralogical and isotopic traits akin to CM chondrites, such as phyllosilicate dominance and low magnetite content, supporting their origin from outer-belt C-complex bodies. While CI chondrites show weaker spectral ties to specific asteroids like (433) Eros, broader dynamical evidence links them to primitive C-types.[120] Enstatite chondrites, both EH and EL varieties, align with E-type asteroids, characterized by reduced enstatite-rich compositions and minimal iron oxidation. Asteroid (2867) Steins, an E-type target of the Rosetta mission, displays reflectance spectra consistent with unweathered enstatite chondrite material, including a strong 0.95 μm pyroxene band. The Athor family has been identified as a probable source for EL chondrites based on orbital clustering and compositional matches.[121][122] Carbonaceous chondrite near-Earth objects (NEOs) predominantly originate from the outer asteroid belt, facilitated by resonant perturbations. Dynamical models incorporate the Yarkovsky effect, which induces semimajor axis drift in kilometer-sized fragments, combined with secular resonances like ν6, to enhance meteorite flux to Earth orbits over 10-100 million years.[123]

Recent Discoveries (Post-2020)

In 2025, analysis of samples returned by China's Chang'e-6 mission from the Moon's far side revealed seven olivine-bearing fragments identified as impactor relics resembling CI-like chondrites, providing direct evidence of volatile-rich carbonaceous material delivery to the lunar surface from ancient basin-forming impacts.[70] These relics, characterized by their mineralogy and isotopic signatures, suggest that CI chondrite-like bodies played a key role in early solar system material exchange, distinct from more common ordinary chondrite impacts.[70] Samples returned by NASA's OSIRIS-REx mission from asteroid (101955) Bennu in 2023, with detailed analyses published through 2025, confirm a composition akin to CM and CI carbonaceous chondrites. The samples are dominated by hydrated phyllosilicates (e.g., serpentine and saponite, ~80 vol%), carbonates, and organics, with oxygen isotopes plotting near the carbonaceous chondrite anhydrous mineral line (Δ¹⁷O ≈ -0.5‰ to 0‰). This supports Bennu's origin from an aqueously altered parent body in the outer asteroid belt and highlights similarities to Ryugu, enhancing understanding of volatile delivery to terrestrial planets.[124][125] The discovery of Northwest Africa (NWA) 4757 has expanded the known diversity within the CY carbonaceous chondrite group, with its petrology and mineralogy aligning with CY characteristics but featuring a notably 16O-poor oxygen isotopic composition (δ¹⁸O = 23.83‰, δ¹⁷O = 12.84‰, Δ¹⁷O = 0.45‰).[48] This meteorite exhibits evidence of both metamorphism and aqueous alteration, including low bulk H₂O content compared to typical CM2 chondrites, highlighting potential multiple parent body origins for CY-group materials.[48] Additionally, a 2025 study reassessed pairing and classification among 23 CM chondrites recovered from the Meteorite Hills in the Transantarctic Mountains, identifying new pairings based on petrographic, chemical, and spatial data to refine the Antarctic meteorite collection's representativeness.[35] Recent experimental and modeling advances have illuminated key processes in chondrite evolution. A 2025 study demonstrated that impact-driven oxidation of organics in carbonaceous chondrites leads to CO and/or CO₂ gas production and explosive decompression, explaining the observed dichotomy in shock metamorphism where carbonaceous chondrites appear less shocked than ordinary ones despite similar impact histories.[112] Complementing this, research in 2024 revealed that chondritic meteorites react with H₂-rich early solar nebula atmospheres, reducing FeS to form H₂S and metallic Fe, which provides a mechanism for sulfide reduction and volatile redistribution during accretion.[126] Isotopic and siderophile element analyses in 2025 indicated protracted core formation in carbonaceous chondrite (CC) parent bodies, spanning millions of years with smaller, sulfur-poor cores exhibiting highly siderophile element (HSE) enrichment relative to non-carbonaceous bodies, shaped by repeated impacts and incomplete metal-silicate equilibration.[89] This prolonged differentiation contrasts with faster processes in non-CC planetesimals and underscores the role of giant impacts in CC evolution.[89] Classification schemes for unequilibrated chondrites were refined in 2024 through a secondary petrologic subtype system (e.g., 3.0–3.9), incorporating criteria such as phyllosilicate structural order and mineral heterogeneity to better capture subtle thermal and aqueous alteration gradients in type 3 materials, with applications to ordinary and carbonaceous groups.[49]

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