Other
Scientific paper
Jul 1998
adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-data_query?bibcode=1998m%26ps...33..765b&link_type=abstract
Meteoritics & Planetary Science, vol. 33, no. 4, pp. 765-773.
Other
21
Scientific paper
Crystallographic relationships between magnetite, sulfides, and carbonate rosettes in fracture zones of the ALH84001 Martian meteorite have been studied using analytical electron microscopy. We have focused on those magnetite grains whose growth mechanisms can be rigorously established from their crystallographic properties. Individual magnetite nanocrystals on the surfaces of carbonates are epitaxially intergrown with one another in `stacks' of single-domain crystals. Other magnetite nanocrystals are epitaxially intergrown with the surfaces of the carbonate substrates. The observed magnetite/carbonate (hkl) Miller indices orientation relationships are (-1,-1,3)m( (1,-1,0)c and (1,-1,1)m ( (0,0,-3)c with lattice mismatches of ~13% and ~11% respectively. Epitaxy is a common mode of vapor-phase growth of refractory oxides like magnetite, as is spiral growth about axial screw dislocations previously observed in other magnetite nanocrystals in ALH84001. Epitaxy rules out intracellular precipitation of these magnetites by (Martian) organisms, provides further evidence of the high-temperature (>120o C) inorganic origins of magnetite in ALH84001, and indicates that the carbonates have also been exposed to elevated temperatures.
Bradley John P.
Harvey Ralph P.
McSween Harry Y. Jr.
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