I guess I've been goaded into responding.
First, at this point we don't know if the meteorite is a CM chondrite or not. No meteorite researcher has completed an analysis of it yet (perhaps tomorrow or Friday) and I have not seen a piece. But, on the more general question of CM chondrites, most researchers believe that the carbonaceous chondrites all are derived from asteroids. There is more or less a continuum in properties across the chondrite groups; it is difficult to imagine that they are from different classes of parent bodies, i.e., asteroids vs. comets. All chondrite groups (except CI) contain chondrules, CAIs, matrix, metal and sulfide although the abundances of these phases can vary a lot among the groups. Even CI chondrites contain a few olivine and pyroxene grains that seem to be chondrule fragments, a few refractory mineral grains that seem to be CAI fragments, and even one reported intact CAI. Furthermore, the isolated olivine and pyroxene grains in CI chondrites have the same olivine Fa vs. CaO distribution as in CM chondrites suggesting that they are from a similar source. I think that the CM chondrites are from an asteroid that was fairly porous and had a fair amount of water, present either as ice or in phyllosilicates. Stochastic impacts on this asteroid caused fracturing in some regions more than others and during subsequent aqueous alteration (probably caused by impact mobilization of water), the more fractured regions retained more water and became more altered.


Alan Rubin
Institute of Geophysics and Planetary Physics
University of California
3845 Slichter Hall
603 Charles Young Dr. E
Los Angeles, CA  90095-1567
phone: 310-825-3202
e-mail: aeru...@ucla.edu
website: http://cosmochemists.igpp.ucla.edu/Rubin.html


----- Original Message ----- From: "Matson, Robert D." <robert.d.mat...@saic.com>
To: "meteorite-list" <meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com>
Sent: Wednesday, May 02, 2012 2:16 PM
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Asteroid Or Comet Sutters Mill


Hi Paul,

Probably not a misquote -- Dr. Jenniskens is interested in deciphering
the
nature of the original asteroid (meteoroid) body that produced the
meteorites. The original body was large enough that it may not have been
a monolithic body; as with 2008 TC3 (Almahata Sitta), the pre-encounter
body may have been a rubble pile, consisting of more than just CM2
material. In any case, I don't think the parent body (or bodies) for CM2
is cometary. Would be interested in hearing Dr. Rubin's theory on the
nature of the CM2 parent.  --Rob

-----Original Message-----
From: meteorite-list-boun...@meteoritecentral.com
[mailto:meteorite-list-boun...@meteoritecentral.com] On Behalf Of Paul
Gessler
Sent: Wednesday, May 02, 2012 2:08 PM
To: meteorite-list
Subject: [meteorite-list] Asteroid Or Comet Sutters Mill

In the LA times article it reads in part:

We want to learn about this asteroid," said Peter Jenniskens, an
astronomer and senior research scientist at the Carl Sagan Center at the
SETI (Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence) Institute and the NASA
Lunar Science Institute. "This is scientific gold."

I hope/probably they miss quoted him?

I vote comet

Paul G

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