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The Winchcombe meteorite, a unique and pristine witness from the outer solar system

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posted on 2023-06-29, 10:24 authored by AJ King, L Daly, J Rowe, KH Joy, RC Greenwood, HAR Devillepoix, MD Suttle, QHS Chan, SS Russell, HC Bates, JFJ Bryson, PL Clay, D Vida, MR Lee, Á O’Brien, LJ Hallis, NR Stephen, R Tartèse, EK Sansom, MC Towner, M Cupak, PM Shober, PA Bland, R Findlay, IA Franchi, AB Verchovsky, FAJ Abernethy, MM Grady, CJ Floyd, M Van Ginneken, J Bridges, LJ Hicks, RH Jones, JT Mitchell, MJ Genge, L Jenkins, PE Martin, MA Sephton, JS Watson, T Salge, KA Shirley, RJ Curtis, TJ Warren, NE Bowles, FM Stuart, LD Nicola, D Györe, AJ Boyce, KMM Shaw, T Elliott, RCJ Steele, P Povinec, M Laubenstein, D Sanderson, A Cresswell, AJT Jull, I Sýkora, S Sridhar, RJ Harrison, FM Willcocks, CS Harrison, D Hallatt, PJ Wozniakiewicz, MJ Burchell, LS Alesbrook, A Dignam, NV Almeida, CL Smith, B Clark, ER Humphreys-Williams, PF Schofield, LT Cornwell, V Spathis, GH Morgan, MJ Perkins, R Kacerek, P Campbell-Burns, F Colas, B Zanda, P Vernazza, S Bouley, S Jeanne, M Hankey, GS Collins, JS Young, C Shaw, J Horak, D Jones, N James, S Bosley, A Shuttleworth, P Dickinson, I McMullan, D Robson, ARD Smedley, B Stanley, R Bassom, M McIntyre, AA Suttle, R Fleet
Direct links between carbonaceous chondrites and their parent bodies in the solar system are rare. The Winchcombe meteorite is the most accurately recorded carbonaceous chondrite fall. Its pre-atmospheric orbit and cosmic-ray exposure age confirm that it arrived on Earth shortly after ejection from a primitive asteroid. Recovered only hours after falling, the composition of the Winchcombe meteorite is largely unmodified by the terrestrial environment. It contains abundant hydrated silicates formed during fluid-rock reactions, and carbon- and nitrogen-bearing organic matter including soluble protein amino acids. The near-pristine hydrogen isotopic composition of the Winchcombe meteorite is comparable to the terrestrial hydrosphere, providing further evidence that volatile-rich carbonaceous asteroids played an important role in the origin of Earth’s water.

History

Author affiliation

Space Park Leicester, The University of Leicester

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Science Advances

Volume

8

Issue

46

Pagination

eabq3925

Publisher

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

issn

2375-2548

eissn

2375-2548

Copyright date

2022

Available date

2023-06-29

Spatial coverage

United States

Language

eng

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