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      Widespread magma oceans on asteroidal bodies in the early Solar System.

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      Nature

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          Abstract

          Immediately following the formation of the Solar System, small planetary bodies accreted, some of which melted to produce igneous rocks. Over a longer timescale (15-33 Myr), the inner planets grew by incorporation of these smaller objects through collisions. Processes operating on such asteroids strongly influenced the final composition of these planets, including Earth. Currently there is little agreement about the nature of asteroidal igneous activity: proposals range from small-scale melting, to near total fusion and the formation of deep magma oceans. Here we report a study of oxygen isotopes in two basaltic meteorite suites, the HEDs (howardites, eucrites and diogenites, which are thought to sample the asteroid 4 Vesta) and the angrites (from an unidentified asteroidal source). Our results demonstrate that these meteorite suites formed during early, global-scale melting (> or = 50 per cent) events. We show that magma oceans were present on all the differentiated Solar System bodies so far sampled. Magma oceans produced compositionally layered planetesimals; the modification of such bodies before incorporation into larger objects can explain some anomalous planetary features, such as Earth's high Mg/Si ratio.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Nature
          Nature
          1476-4687
          0028-0836
          Jun 16 2005
          : 435
          : 7044
          Affiliations
          [1 ] PSSRI, Open University, Walton Hall, Milton Keynes MK7 6AA, UK. r.c.greenwood@open.ac.uk
          Article
          nature03612
          10.1038/nature03612
          15959509
          eafb59cf-cc6b-44a6-8575-8e0b73cf71b0
          History

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