
Chemical, isotopic (O, He, U), and petrological characteristics of a slowly cooled enriched gabbroic shergottite, Northwest Africa 13134
Northwest Africa 13134 is a coarse-grained gabbro with an oxygen isotopic composition consistent with a Martian origin and is classified as an enriched shergottite based on its bulk trace element abundances and bulk La/Yb ratio of 1.53. The meteorite is composed of a framework of large pyroxene rods up to 6 mm in longest dimension (64% by area) with interstitial maskelynite (formerly plagioclase; 28% by area). Minor phases include merrillite and apatite, Fe-Ti oxides, and Fe-sulfides; trace phases such as baddeleyite, tranquillityite, fayalitic olivine, silica, and a felspathic phase are observed in evolved mesostasis pockets and partially crystallized magmatic inclusions in minerals. Individual pyroxene rods display a distinctive patchy Ca zoning pattern of juxtaposed low-Ca (pigeonite) and high-Ca (augite) patches with a common crystallographic orientation indicating epitaxial growth. Low-Ca pigeonite is the volumetrically dominant pyroxene phase (~70% of exposed pyroxene) and was the primary liquidus phase, followed closely by augite. Plagioclase crystallized along with the other minor phases from the residual melt between cumulus pyroxene rods. Pyroxenes display ubiquitous exsolution lamellae with typical widths and spacings of 1–2 μm. Sulfide grains are characterized by flame-shaped lamellar intergrowths of hexagonal pyrrhotite (Fe
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- Geochemistry & Geophysics
- 5109 Space sciences
- 5101 Astronomical sciences
- 0403 Geology
- 0402 Geochemistry
- 0201 Astronomical and Space Sciences
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Published In
DOI
ISSN
Publication Date
Volume
Issue
Start / End Page
Related Subject Headings
- Geochemistry & Geophysics
- 5109 Space sciences
- 5101 Astronomical sciences
- 0403 Geology
- 0402 Geochemistry
- 0201 Astronomical and Space Sciences