Compositional variation and mixing of impact melts on microscopic scales

Mathematics – Logic

Scientific paper

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Scientific paper

We investigated the compositional characteristics of schlieren-rich, holohyaline impact glasses from Ries, Wabar, and Meteor Crater using a Cameca SX 100 Scanning Electron Microprobe. This instrument is capable of producing detailed maps of major elements at spatial resolutions of < 10 microns. The objective was to characterize the composition of an unusually large number of individual schlieren and to evaluate details of the process which causes melts of lithologically diverse target rocks to mix on scales of micrometers. The Ries and Meteor Crater impacts involved lithologically heterogeneous targets, whereas Wabar formed in relatively uniform dune sand. Texturally heterogeneous, schlieren-rich glasses from the Ries Crater illustrate that schlieren of highly variable color can be surprisingly similar in composition, as first detailed by Stohle (1972). Consistent with these earlier findings, most schlieren represent mixtures of diverse rock melts; their compositions deviate only subtly from the average melt and do not resemble monomineralic melts nor binary mixtures of major rock-forming minerals. A specific population of schlieren is enriched in mafic elements (Mg, Fe, and Ca), suggestive of incomplete homogenization of an amphibolite progenitor. In the case of Wabar, a compositionally simple melt of dune sand mixed with projectile (IIIA iron meteorite) materials and specific schlieren are subtly variable mixtures of these two progenitors. The optically homogeneous glass from Meteor crater is compositionally homogeneous as well, suggesting ideal mixing of such diverse lithologies as platform carbonates, sandstone, and the Class IIIA iron meteorite. The mixing of projectile and target melts at Wabar and Meteor Crater demonstrates unambiguously that melts initially produced in distinctly different stratigraphic/structural locations will undergo wholesale mixing, if not homogenization. Also, the projectile melts unquestionably formed relatively early in the cratering process and their dissemination throughout the prospective melt volume, albeit at variable concentration levels, suggests that the entire mixing process may be an early cratering feature. This also follows from the fact that we investigated ballistic melt-ejecta, thereby eliminating all of those mixing processes that may additionally operate during the pooling and generation of massive melt-ponds following gravitational collapse of large, structurally complex craters. Substantial turbulence ranging from field dimensions to microscopic scales seems inescapable to accomplish the observed degree of mixing, yet this is not readily inferred from current models of macroscopic material motions during hypervelocity impact.

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