The Large Crater Origin of SNC Meteorites
- 14 August 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Science
- Vol. 237 (4816) , 738-743
- https://doi.org/10.1126/science.237.4816.738
Abstract
A large body of evidence strongly suggests that the shergottite, nakhlite, and Chassigny (SNC) meteorites are from Mars. Various mechanisms for the ejection of large rocks at martian escape velocity (5 kilometers per second) have been investigated, but none has proved wholly satisfactory. This article examines a number of possible ejection and cosmic-ray exposure histories to determine which is most plausible. For each possible history, the Melosh spallation model is used to estimate the size of the crater required to produce ejecta fragments of the required size with velocities ≥5 kilometers per second and to produce a total mass of solid ejecta consistent with the observed mass flux of SNC meteorites. Estimates of crater production rates on Mars are then used to evaluate the probability that sufficiently large craters have formed during the available time. The results indicate that the SNC meteorites were probably ejected from a very large crater (> 100 kilometers in diameter) about 200 million years ago, and that cosmic-ray exposure of the recovered meteorites was initiated after collisional fragmentation of the original ejecta in space at much later times (0.5 to 10 million years ago).Keywords
This publication has 24 references indexed in Scilit:
- Impact ejection, spallation, and the origin of meteoritesPublished by Elsevier ,2002
- Oblique Impact: A Process for Obtaining Meteorite Samples from Other PlanetsScience, 1986
- SNC meteorites: Clues to Martian petrologic evolution?Reviews of Geophysics, 1985
- Impact cratering and spall failure of gabbroIcarus, 1984
- The origin of SNC meteorites: An alternative to MarsIcarus, 1983
- A quasi-simple ablation model for large meteorite entry: theory vs observationsJournal of Atmospheric and Terrestrial Physics, 1979
- Destruction of basaltic bodies by high-velocity impactIcarus, 1977
- Relative crater production rates on planetsIcarus, 1977
- Mars: A Standard Crater Curve and Possible New Time ScaleScience, 1976
- The origin of meteorites as small bodies. II. The modelThe Astrophysical Journal, 1965