>From the January 30, 2003 issue of Earth & Planetary Science Letters:

Lee, M. R. and P. A. Bland, Dating climatic change in hot deserts 
using desert varnish on meteorite finds, Earth Planet. Sci. Lett. 
206, 187-198, (2003).

Abstract

A thin coating of desert varnish occurs on Forrest 009 and Nurina 004, 
both equilibrated ordinary chondrite (L6) finds from the Nullarbor 
Plain, Australia. This finely laminated deposit is chemically and 
petrographically comparable to the varnish found on terrestrial rocks. 
Forrest 009, which has a terrestrial age of 5.9 kyr, has a 100-130 m 
thick coating of desert varnish that has a laterally consistent 
chemical microstratigraphy comprising a narrow Ba- and Mn-poor lower 
region, a thick Ba- and Mn-rich central area and a narrow outer zone 
almost devoid of both cations. The interior of the meteorite contains 
Fe-oxide and oxyhydroxide veins that have formed by chemical weathering 
of metals and sulphides. As these veins do not cross-cut the varnish, it 
must have accreted rapidly relative to the weathering rate of the 
meteorite. The 70 m thick varnish on Nurina 004, which has a terrestrial 
age of 33.4 kyr, lacks a consistent chemical microstratigraphy, but it 
is cross-cut by Fe-oxide and oxyhydroxide veins, some of which have 
supplied Fe to the varnish. This implies that the chemical weathering 
rate of Nurina 004's interior was slow in comparison to the accretion 
rate of the varnish. The petrography and chemical composition of varnish
on Forrest 009 indicates that this meteorite may have resided in a 
relatively humid environment for most of its 5.9 kyr terrestrial
history and that the Nullarbor recently became more arid. This 
conclusion supports results from an analysis of Fe-bearing
weathering products in the interior of the meteorite by M�ssbauer 
spectroscopy, which also indicate that Forrest 009 experienced an early 
period of rapid weathering under relatively humid conditions. The 
petrography of varnish on Nurina 004 shows that the interior of the 
meteorite weathered relatively slowly, probably because it fell during 
an arid time, which is again in agreement with previous M�ssbauer 
spectroscopy results. Results from both meteorites are in agreement 
with palaeoclimate data derived from a number of other proxies. The 
implications of this work are that the large number of meteorites that have
been collected from several hot deserts of the world may be a powerful 
source of information on climate change over the last 30-35 kyr. 



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