The fusion crust of the Winchcombe meteorite: A preserved record of atmospheric entry processes
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Authors
Genge, Matthew JAlesbrook, Luke
Almeida, Natasha V
Bates, Helena C
Bland, Phil A
Boyd, Mark R
Burchell, Mark J
Collins, Gareth S
Cornwell, Luke T
Daly, Luke
Devillepoix, Hadrien AR
van Ginneken, Matthias
Greshake, Ansgar
Hallatt, Daniel
Hamann, Christopher
Hecht, Lutz
Jenkins, Laura E
Johnson, Diane
Jones, Rosie
King, A

Mansour, Haithem
McMullan, Sarah
Mitchell, Jennifer T
Rollinson, Gavyn
Russell, Sara S
Schröder, Christian
Stephen, Natasha R
Suttle, Martin D
Tandy, Jon D
Trimby, Patrick
Sansom, Eleanor K
Spathis, Vassilia
Willcocks, Francesca M
Wozniakiewicz, Penelope J
Issue date
2024-05-10Submitted date
2022-06-03
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Show full item recordAbstract
Abstract - Fusion crusts form during the atmospheric entry heating of meteorites and preserve a record of the conditions that occurred during deceleration in the atmosphere. The fusion crust of the Winchcombe meteorite closely resembles that of other stony meteorites, and in particular CM2 chondrites, since it is dominated by olivine phenocrysts set in a glassy mesostasis with magnetite, and is highly vesicular. Dehydration cracks are unusually abundant in Winchcombe. Failure of this weak layer is an additional ablation mechanism to produce large numbers of particles during deceleration, consistent with the observation of pulses of plasma in videos of the Winchcombe fireball. Calving events might provide an observable phenomenon related to meteorites that are particularly susceptible to dehydration. Oscillatory zoning is observed within olivine phenocrysts in the fusion crust, in contrast to other meteorites, perhaps owing to temperature fluctuations resulting from calving events. Magnetite monolayers are found in the crust, and have also not been previously reported, and form discontinuous strata. These features grade into magnetite rims formed on the external surface of the crust and suggest the trapping of surface magnetite by collapse of melt. Magnetite monolayers may be a feature of meteorites that undergo significant degassing. Silicate warts with dendritic textures were observed and are suggested to be droplets ablated from another stone in the shower. They, therefore, represent the first evidence for intershower transfer of ablation materials and are consistent with the other evidence in the Winchcombe meteorite for unusually intense gas loss and ablation, despite its low entry velocity.Citation
Genge, M.J., Alesbrook, L., Almeida, N.V., Bates, H.C., Bland, P.A., Boyd, M.R., Burchell, M.J., Collins, G.S., Cornwell, L.T., Daly, L., Devillepoix, H.A.R., van Ginneken, M., Greshake, A., Hallatt, D., Hamann, C., Hecht, L., Jenkins, L.E., Johnson, D., Jones, R., King, A.J., Mansour, H., McMullan, S., Mitchell, J.T., Rollinson, G., Russell, S.S., Schröder, C., Stephen, N.R., Suttle, M.D., Tandy, J.D., Trimby, P., Sansom, E.K., Spathis, V., Willcocks, F.M. and Wozniakiewicz, P.J. (2024), The fusion crust of the Winchcombe meteorite: A preserved record of atmospheric entry processes. Meteorit Planet Sci, 59: 948-972. https://doi.org/10.1111/maps.13937Publisher
WileyType
Journal ArticleItem Description
Copyright © 2022 The Authors. Meteoritics & Planetary Science published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of The Meteoritical Society. This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. The attached file is the published version of the article.NHM Repository
ISSN
1086-9379EISSN
1945-5100ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1111/maps.13937
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