Title

Meteoritical Evidence And Constraints On Asteroid Impacts And Disruption

Keywords

Asteroids; Catastrophic impacts; Meteorites

Abstract

Impact events have played a central role in the life of meteorites. They compacted and lithified the dust from which meteorites are made; produced shock minerals, shock melting, and shock blackening of meteoritic minerals on their parent bodies; turned their parent bodies into rubble; and dispersed at least some pieces of this rubble, sending them to Earth as meteorites. Thus, as well as owing their very existence to the occurrence of catastrophic disruptions, meteorites contain physical ground truth concerning the impact and disruption environment of the solar system. Reviewing these aspects of the impact-meteorite connection, we conclude that impacts severe enough to disrupt asteroids were rare in the earliest stages of the solar nebula, when meteorite parent bodies accreted and were lithified. Likewise, though catastrophic disruptions clearly have occurred over the past several billion years, the small number of exposure events seen in the meteoritic cosmic ray age record indicates that such disruptions at these times also were rare. However, catastrophic disruptions must have been very prevalent during the first billion years of the solar system, resulting in the widespread asteroid macroporosity inferred from the comparison of asteroid bulk densities to meteorite grain densities. © 2004 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Publication Date

10-1-2004

Publication Title

Planetary and Space Science

Volume

52

Issue

12

Number of Pages

1119-1128

Document Type

Article; Proceedings Paper

Personal Identifier

scopus

DOI Link

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pss.2004.07.009

Socpus ID

6444223822 (Scopus)

Source API URL

https://api.elsevier.com/content/abstract/scopus_id/6444223822

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