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http://www.universetoday.com/83452/meteorites-illuminate-mystery-of-chromium-in-earths-core/----------------------------------Meteorites
 Illuminate Mystery of Chromium in Earth's Coreby Anne Minard on February 24, 
2011It's generally assumed that the Earth's overall composition is similar tothat of 
chondritic meteorites, the primitive, undifferentiated buildingblocks of the solar 
system. But a new study in Science Express led byFrederic Moynier, of the University 
of California at Davis, seems to suggestthat Earth is a bit of an oddball.Thin 
section of a chondritic meteorite. Credit: NASAMoynier and his colleagues analyzed 
the isotope signature of chromium in avariety of meteorites, and found that it 
differed from chromium's signaturein the mantle."We show through high-precision 
measurements of Cr stable isotopes in arange of meteorites, which deviate by up to 
~0.4? from the bulk silicateEarth, that Cr depletion resulted from its partitioning 
into Earth's corewith a preferenti
al enrichment in light isotopes," the authors write."Ab-initio calculations suggest that the 
isotopic signature was establishedat mid-mantle magma ocean depth as Earth accreted planetary embryos 
andprogressively became more oxidized."Chromium's origins. New evidence suggests that, in the early 
solar nebula(A), chromium isotopes were divided into two components, one containinglight isotopes, the 
other heavy isotopes. In the early Earth (B), thesecomponents formed a homogeneous mixture. During core 
partitioning (C), thecore became enriched with lighter chromium isotopes, and the mantle withheavier 
isotopes. Courtesy of Science/AAASThe results point to a process known as "core partitioning," 
rather than analternative process involving the volatilization of certain chromiumisotopes so that they 
would have escaped from the Earth's mantle. Corepartitioning took place early on Earth at high 
temperatures, when the coreseparated from the silicate earth, leaving the core with a distin
ctcomposition that is enriched with lighter chromium isotopes, notes WilliamMcDonough, from the 
University of Maryland at College Park, in anaccompanying Perspective piece.McDonough writes that 
chromium, Earth's 10th most abundant element, is namedfor the Greek word for color and "adds 
green to emeralds, red to rubies,brilliance to plated metals, and corrosion-proof quality to 
stainlesssteels." It is distributed roughly equally throughout the planet.He says the new 
result "adds another investigative tool for understandingand documenting past and present 
planetary processes. For the cosmochemistryand meteoritics communities, the findings further 
bolster the view that thesolar nebula was a heterogeneous mixture of different 
components."Source: Science. The McDonough paper will be published online today by thejournal 
Science, at the Science Express website.----------------------------------Two questions: How do 
they know what kind of chormium is in the Earth's coreand is 0.4% a
 statistically significant number?Phil Whitmer
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