Are high temperature fractionations in the solar nebula preserved in highly siderophile element systematics of the Earth's mantle?

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Scientific paper

The relative abundances of the highly siderophile elements (HSE) Os, Ir, Ru, Pt, Rh, and Pd in relatively pristine lherzolites differ from solar abundance ratios and are several orders of magnitude higher than predicted for equilibrium distribution between metal/silicate (core-mantle). The samples are characterized by a mean Ca/Al atomic ratio of 1.18 +/- 0.09 ?M and a mean Ca/Si atomic ratio of 0.10 +/- 0.01 ?M, overlapping with a mean Ca/Al of 1.069 +/- 0.044 ?M and a mean Ca/Si of 0.081 +/- 0.023 ?M found in chondrites (Wasson and Kallemeyn 1988). Interestingly, the CI-normalized abundance pattern shows decreasing solar system normalized abundances with increasing condensation temperatures. The abundance of the moderately volatile element Pd is about 2× higher than those in the most refractory siderophiles Ir and Os. Thus, the HSE systematics of upper mantle samples suggest that the late bombardment, which added these elements to the accreting Earth, more closely resembles materials of highly reduced EH or EL chondrites than carbonaceous chondrites. In fact, the HSE in the Earth mantle are even more fractionated than the enstatite chondrites-an indication that some inner solar system materials were more highly fractionated than the latter.

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