Computer Science
Scientific paper
Jun 1974
adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-data_query?bibcode=1974comp...46...81d&link_type=abstract
Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology, vol. 46, 1974, p. 81-97.
Computer Science
9
Glass, Meteorite Craters, Solubility, Spheroids, Breccia, Chemical Composition, Crystallography, Hypervelocity Impact, Magnesium Oxides, Microstructure, Montmorillonite, Morphology, Petrography
Scientific paper
Glass from the West Clearwater Lake hypervelocity impact crater contains numerous spheroids, 10 to 500 microns across, which appear to have formed at high temperatures as fluids immiscible in the enclosing melt. The spheroids are distinguished from small, normal, largely void gas vesicles, which are also present, by being completely filled in all cases; by having fillings which vary in composition from spheroid to spheroid, even between spheroids in close association; and by indications that the present fillings are representative of the contents present before the matrix melt chilled. Most of the spheroids are classified petrographically into three types. The preservation of spheroids in the West Clearwater Lake glass is attributed mainly to the position of the glass masses within the breccias lining the crater floor. It is considered that the glass in this location did not achieve free flight but, as part of a large mass, cooled relatively slowly through the high temperature regime in which the spheroids were generated, and then, when detached, chilled rapidly to preserve a record of this transient stage in their history.
Dence Michael R.
Plant A. G.
von Engelhardt Wolf
Walter Louis S.
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