Hi Walter,
only a remark... for not being the same thing like with the ominous
purple
halite-crystals containing liquid water in Zag,
which are described in literature - but so far noooooone of the
collectors
ever found one in any of their 175kgs of slices... :-)
Those inclusions in the Martian shock glasses - you can really have them
as
a collector too!!
The fresh-shergottite-series - NWA 2975/2986/4766 seq..
there the maskelynite is still so fresh, that it is translucent.
So it's possible without special equipment and special preparation to
spot
these inclusions in the maskelynite with a simple microscope under low
magnification in cut surfaces.
And you know what? Here and there these maskelynite patches contain
little
bubbles!
A while ago a collector loaded up a photo he made from such a bubble out
of
that NWA-series in the German forum.
Fascinating isn't it?
So, dear collectors, I'm sure many of you have samples form that
Martian,
let's hunt for bubbles!
Best!
Martin
-----Ursprüngliche Nachricht-----
Von: meteorite-list-boun...@meteoritecentral.com
[mailto:meteorite-list-boun...@meteoritecentral.com] Im Auftrag von
Walter
Branch
Gesendet: Mittwoch, 9. Februar 2011 04:31
An: MeteorList
Betreff: [meteorite-list] EETA 79001 and the Martian Atmosphere
Hello Everyone,
I feel like an idiot.
I know that trapped atmospheric gases have been found in some martian
meteorites but for some unexplained reason, I had always thought that
the
gases had been incorporated in the rock at the time of formation. I
always
wondered how gases from the martian atmosphere could have been trapped
in a
rock at the time it formed, particularly an igneous rock in an
underground
magma chamber.
Well, thanks to William Cassidy, the man who founded ANSMET, I now
realize
my assumption was wrong. Cassidy makes it clear that gasses became
trapped
in martian rocks at the time of the impact which launched the rock from
the
surface. The rather lengthy quote below is from Cassidy's book
"Meteorites,
Ice and Antarctica" an excellent book (see more after the quote).
>From pages 119-121
EETA 79001 was an important find for another reason. It contained proof
that
SNC meteorites come from Mars. This meteorite had been highly shocked
during
the impact that ejected it from the martian surface, and one of the
shock
effects was to produce pods of glass that had been melted from the
constituent minerals of the meteorite by the transient heating generated
by
shock pressures. The melts that were formed were partly injected along
cracks in the rock and partly retained as molten beads at the sites
where
they formed. Cooling occurred immediately behind the shock wave and the
beads were chilled to glass before they could crystalize. Apparently the
crater forming asteroid had built up a lense off compressed atmosphere
in
front of it during it's lengthy trajectory toward the surface of the
planet.
When it struck the surface it injected highly compressed air into the
target
rock, and some of this was trapped in the shock-melted inclusions. We
know
the composition of the martian atmosphere from measurements made by
Viking
Landers I and II. When some of the glass inclusions were picked out of
EETA
79001 and remelted, the gave up their dissolved gases. These gasses when
analyzed and corrected for slight terrestrial contamination, contained
nitrogen and carbon dioxide in the same abundances as the atmosphere of
Mars; they also had isotopes of argon, neon, , krypton, and xenon in the
same abundances as does the martian atmosphere. This neat bit of
detective
work by a number of workers, for the first time tied a SNC meteorite
directly to the planet Mars and, through this meteorite, to all the
other
meteorites.
I love Cassidy's book. If you like meteorites in general, martian and
lunar
meteorites (like me) and are curious about the ANSMET program and you
don't
have a copy of this book, you are really missing out. The book is a gold
mine of information regarding ANSMET. It is very readable, technical in
some
places, humorous in others and poignant in others. Some books I love
holding
and reading and this is one of those books. It is hardbound with glossy
pages and nicely illustrated. I like the physical proportion of the book
and
I even like the dust jacket (I usually abhor dust jackets).
Anyway, many thanks to Dr. Cassidy for clearing that up with me and
thanks
for writing such a wonderful book.
-Walter Branch
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