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      A 4,565-My-old andesite from an extinct chondritic protoplanet

      Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
      Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

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          Abstract

          The age of iron meteorites implies that accretion of protoplanets began during the first millions of years of the solar system. Due to the heat generated by 26 Al decay, many early protoplanets were fully differentiated with an igneous crust produced during the cooling of a magma ocean and the segregation at depth of a metallic core. The formation and nature of the primordial crust generated during the early stages of melting is poorly understood, due in part to the scarcity of available samples. The newly discovered meteorite Erg Chech 002 (EC 002) originates from one such primitive igneous crust and has an andesite bulk composition. It derives from the partial melting of a noncarbonaceous chondritic reservoir, with no depletion in alkalis relative to the Sun’s photosphere and at a high degree of melting of around 25%. Moreover, EC 002 is, to date, the oldest known piece of an igneous crust with a 26 Al- 26 Mg crystallization age of 4,565.0 million years (My). Partial melting took place at 1,220 °C up to several hundred kyr before, implying an accretion of the EC 002 parent body ca. 4,566 My ago. Protoplanets covered by andesitic crusts were probably frequent. However, no asteroid shares the spectral features of EC 002, indicating that almost all of these bodies have disappeared, either because they went on to form the building blocks of larger bodies or planets or were simply destroyed.

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          Most cited references25

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          26Al–26Mg and 207Pb–206Pb systematics of Allende CAIs: Canonical solar initial 26Al/27Al ratio reinstated

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            Absolute isotopic abundance ratios and atomic weight of magnesium

            Absolute values have been obtained for the isotopic abundance ratios of magnesium, using surface emission mass spectrometry. Samples of known isotopic composition, prepared from nearly pure separated magnesium isotopes, were used to calibrate the mass spectrometers. The resulting absolute values are 25 Mg/ 24 Mg = 0.12663 ±0.00013 and 26 Mg/ 24 Mg = 0.13932 ± 0.00026, yielding an atomic weight ( 12 C = 12) of 24.30497 ±0.00044. The indicated uncertainties are overall limits of error based on 95 percent confidence limits for the mean and allowances for effects of known sources of possible systematic error.
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              HED Meteorites and Their Relationship to the Geology of Vesta and the Dawn Mission

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                10.1073/pnas.2026129118
                33836612
                https://www.pnas.org/site/aboutpnas/licenses.xhtml

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