Northwest Africa (NWA) 6583 is a silicate-bearing iron meteorite with Ni = 18 wt%. The oxygen isotope composition of the silicates ({increment}′17O = -0.439 ‰) indicates a genetic link with the IAB-complex. Other chemical, mineralogical, and textural features of NWA 6583 are consistent with classification as a new member of the IAB-complex. However, some unique features, e.g., the low Au content (1.13 μg g-1) and the extremely reducing conditions of formation (approximately -3.5 {increment}IW), distinguish NWA 6583 from the known IAB-complex irons and extend the properties of this group of meteorites. The chemical and textural features of NWA 6583 can be ascribed to a genesis by impact melting on a parent body of chondritic composition. This model is also consistent with one of the most recent models for the genesis of the IAB-complex. Northwest Africa 6583 provides a further example of the wide lithological and mineralogical variety that impact melting could produce on the surface of a single asteroid, especially if characterized by an important compositional heterogeneity in space and time like a regolith. © The Meteoritical Society, 2013.
CITATION STYLE
Fazio, A., D’Orazio, M., Folco, L., Gattacceca, J., & Sonzogni, C. (2013). The extremely reduced silicate-bearing iron meteorite Northwest Africa 6583: Implications on the variety of the impact melt rocks of the IAB-complex parent body. Meteoritics and Planetary Science, 48(12), 2451–2468. https://doi.org/10.1111/maps.12231
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