P33C-2135
NWA 7034 Martian breccia: Ar/Ar ages of ca. 1.2 to 1.4 Ga

Wednesday, 16 December 2015
Poster Hall (Moscone South)
Darren F Mark1, Benjamin E Cohen1, William Cassata2, Martin R. Lee3 and Caroline L Smith4, (1)Scottish Universities Environmental Research Center at the University of Glasgow, East Kilbride, United Kingdom, (2)Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Livermore, CA, United States, (3)The University of Glasgow, School of Geographical and Earth Science, Glasgow, United Kingdom, (4)Natural History Museum, London, United Kingdom
Abstract:
NWA 7034 and its paired stones are some of the oldest and most diverse of the Martian meteorites. They are complex polymict breccias of impact, igneous, and sedimentary clasts set in a dark grey matrix [1; 2]. The rock also contains angular mineral fragments, including K-feldspar, plagioclase feldspar, and pyroxene [1; 2]. Mineral fragments are often > 1 mm wide, and clasts can be > 1 cm. This diverse breccia assemblage indicates formation via repeated impact events, supported by Rb-Sr, Sm-Nd and U-Pb ages ranging from 1.3 to 4.4 Ga [1, 2, and references therein].

In this study we investigate the distribution of ages yielded by Ar/Ar, with nine aliquots analyzed to date, and additional analyses planned. In order to analyze only single phases, chips of matrix/clasts were restricted to visibly monomict fragments < 1 mm diameter, while mineral separates were analyzed as single crystals. Cosmogenic Ar corrections are from [3]. Analyses were undertaken at SUERC and Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, and the results pooled. The bulk of aliquots (n = 8) yielded ages of ca. 1.2-1.4 Ga indicating a major thermal event occurred at around the same time as crystallization of the Nakhlite group of meteorites. Select step ages are considerably older (> 2 Ga), supporting results of other chronometers that much older material is present in this sample. These results also demonstrate that some older fragments retained Ar during breccia formation.

[1] Wittmann A. et al. (2015) Meteoritics & Planet. Sci., 50, 326-352.

[2] Santos A. R. et al. (2015) GCA, 157, 56-85.

[3] Cassata W. S., and Borg L. E. (2015) 46th LPSC, Abstract #2742.