"Petrologic type" is really a term that only applies to chondrites. It was popularized in the classic paper:

VAN SCHMUS W. R. and WOOD J. A. (1967) A chemical-petrologic classification for the chondritic meteorites. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 31, 747-765

The term was meant to convey a sense of the degree of equilibration of chondrites. In the old days, there were only 6 defined petrologic types (1-6), making it easy on a collector or museum wishing to establish a reference collection. But now, the scale is interpreted more continuously, with nearly 30 subdivisions appearing in the literature in one place or another (1, 2.0-2.9, 3.01-3.05, 3.10, 3.15, 3.2-2.9, 4, 5, 6), as well as transitional types like 1/2, 3.6/3.7 or 4/5, and breccia mixtures like 4-6.. As for nonchondritic meteorites, petrologic type is undefined. For some of these, there are groups, like the groups of irons you mention, which are analogous to the groups of chondrites (H, L, LL, R, CV, etc.). Some of these are themselves subdivided, as is the IAB complex. For other achondrites, like mesosiderites, there aren't really groups defined, but they have been subdivided into petrographic classes and metamorphic grades, with designations like "B1" to show this. HEDs and ureilites are really messy.

Textural terms, like the iron structural types you mention, or terms like "polymict," "brecciated," etc., are not really classification terms (in general). These are mostly descriptive terms. Use these to subdivide a collection with caution, as they may not be applied uniformly to all meteorites by all researchers.

Jeff



Galactic Stone & Ironworks wrote:
Hi folks!

I am not a type collector per-se, but I like to keep track of how many
different petrologic types I have in my collection.

I have a silly question about type collecting -

Do type collectors consider each type of iron a seperate petrologic
type?  For example, are all octahedrites considered 1 type?  Or is it
different types for "coarsest", "coarse", "medium", "fine", etc?

Right now I have 42 petrologic types - counting ALL irons as only one
type.  Should I go through my collection and correct that count to
reflect the different types - IIAB, IAB, IVA, etc?

Thanks in advance!

MikeG




--
Dr. Jeffrey N. Grossman       phone: (703) 648-6184
US Geological Survey          fax:   (703) 648-6383
954 National Center
Reston, VA 20192, USA


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