Literature DB >> 34099566

Asteroid break-ups and meteorite delivery to Earth the past 500 million years.

Fredrik Terfelt1, Birger Schmitz2,3.   

Abstract

The meteoritic material falling on Earth is believed to derive from large break-up or cratering events in the asteroid belt. The flux of extraterrestrial material would then vary in accordance with the timing of such asteroid family-forming events. In order to validate this, we investigated marine sediments representing 15 time-windows in the Phanerozoic for content of micrometeoritic relict chrome-spinel grains (>32 μm). We compare these data with the timing of the 15 largest break-up events involving chrome-spinel-bearing asteroids (S- and V-types). Unexpectedly, our Phanerozoic time windows show a stable flux dominated by ordinary chondrites similar to today's flux. Only in the mid-Ordovician, in connection with the break-up of the L-chondrite parent body, do we observe an anomalous micrometeorite regime with a two to three orders-of-magnitude increase in the flux of L-chondritic chrome-spinel grains to Earth. This corresponds to a one order-of-magnitude excess in the number of impact craters in the mid-Ordovician following the L-chondrite break-up, the only resolvable peak in Phanerozoic cratering rates indicative of an asteroid shower. We argue that meteorites and small (<1-km-sized) asteroids impacting Earth mainly sample a very small region of orbital space in the asteroid belt. This selectiveness has been remarkably stable over the past 500 Ma.
Copyright © 2021 the Author(s). Published by PNAS.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Phanerozoic history; asteroid break-up; chrome spinel; meteorite delivery

Year:  2021        PMID: 34099566     DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2020977118

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A        ISSN: 0027-8424            Impact factor:   11.205


  1 in total

1.  Constraining the formation and transport of lunar impact glasses using the ages and chemical compositions of Chang'e-5 glass beads.

Authors:  Tao Long; Yuqi Qian; Marc D Norman; Katarina Miljkovic; Carolyn Crow; James W Head; Xiaochao Che; Romain Tartèse; Nicolle Zellner; Xuefeng Yu; Shiwen Xie; Martin Whitehouse; Katherine H Joy; Clive R Neal; Joshua F Snape; Guisheng Zhou; Shoujie Liu; Chun Yang; Zhiqing Yang; Chen Wang; Long Xiao; Dunyi Liu; Alexander Nemchin
Journal:  Sci Adv       Date:  2022-09-28       Impact factor: 14.957

  1 in total

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