Adam wrote:

"NWA 3133 is a CV Primitive Achondrite"

Hi Adam, thanks ... The asteroid belt ought to be called the asteroid zoo!

The question I have on this one, if CV is for certain, would be whether it is the result of a collision with a typical CV type, or is it certain that it is a fully baked CV (what happened to the possible CAI's - are there any, or is the CV possibly just impact regolith?), or, whether some innocent CV got hot all by itself.


Kinest wishes
Doug

(Why does my wallet retract down my pocket every time ths stuff comes up!)




-----Original Message-----
From: Adam Hupe <[email protected]>
To: Adam <[email protected]>
Sent: Tue, Dec 6, 2011 11:47 am
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Primitive Achondrite Question


Doug wrote: I can't wait until someone turns up a CV6+.  Theoretically, there is
no reason to
bar the possibility,, or is there...

NWA 3133 is a CV Primitive Achondrite

All of these oxygen isotope compositions
plot on the CV3 mixing line, suggesting that this achondritic meteorite has
affinities with CV chondrites (Irving et al., 2004).

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