Reply to Edward Anders: A discussion of alternative models for explaining the distribution of moderately volatile elements in ordinary chondrites

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The high observed abundances of Na and Cu in chondrules indicate that the amount of loss during chondrule formation was minor and possibly negligible, consistent with the view that loss was controlled by diffusion kinetics rather than equilibrium volatility, and that the surface of the chondrule quickly cooled to temperatures at which diffusional transport was negligible. Ordinary chondrite/CI abundance ratios appear to be randomly distributed in the range 0.9-0.1. Very few values are observed in the 0.36-0.70 range, but this is not statistically significant, nor is it predicted by the two-component (chondrule-matrix) model. If CI chondrite abundances are representative of mean solar-system material, the very low chondrule content in CM chondrites (<5% of high-temperature materials) indicates that the observed volatile distribution resulted from incomplete accretion of volatile carriers (perhaps a fine aerosol). At the ordinary chondrite formation location the fraction of an element sited in unaccreted carriers increased with decreasing condensation temperature. At the CM location a similar trend is observed for elements less volatile than S, but the unaccreted fraction of more volatile elements was nearly constant.

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