Zelimir writes:

"I was mainly intrigued by the pink CAI but nobody could provide me some 
explanation. I don't claim the same phenomenon (presence of curium) is 
responsible of that color in my sample but now I can't help imagining that the 
curium hypothesis could possibly also explain the color of my CAI."

Zelimir,  Lucky specimen!  I had some mullings on this:

I would rule out that the presence of curium lent the pink color to your CAI.  
Right, the authors do not claim that curium is responsible for the pink color 
in their sample, or that there is presently any curium in the sample either.  I 
think  the amounts of curium are quite tiny to yield any color, they are 
dealing with.

Just a wild guess, but if your beautiful pink CAI happens to be like the one in 
the citation, the "CAI" likely has a matrix of Iron-rich spinel fine crystals 
which just happen to be tinged by Cr(III) in them according to 35 year old 
analyses on a pink CAI, or more descriptively, a MASHI, that was formed from/as 
an altered CAI possibly on an extremely old parent body that had volatiles, 
lots of salts and acid floating around.  Note the rich Cr2O3 assay of the 
interior here:
http://articles.adsabs.harvard.edu/full/1981LPI....12...25A

An image I have is a radioactive heated proto-planet with nasty lakes and your 
pink CAI stuck festering and staining pink in a dirty, salty, pool on it until 
the day something smashed the protoplanet to little bits and only after that 
prehistory did Allende condense.  (I bet if you licked the inclusion it would 
taste like salt).  Whether the pool contained water I wonder, too.  For a nice 
spinel colored by Cr(III) look up the Timur "Ruby"... or click on this
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spinel#/media/File:Spinel2.jpg 

It was not clear for me where the samples were coming from in this paper.  It's 
fairly clear they are all Allende specimens, and going by the footnotes and 
guessing about the sample numbers, it looks like Chicago had two coarse grained 
CAIs that were extracted for the paper, and the rest of the samples were from 
the Fields Museum donations, where the researchers destructively analyzed 
pieces of the CAIs they extracted, looking for fine grained ones perhaps were 
reminiscent of the old "Pink Angel" an inclusion that was close to the heart of 
Jerry Wasserburg. 

IMO They would have been better off naming it "Curious Jerry" for Wasserburg, 
who helped open the Pandora's Box of CAI's and was a principal discoverer that 
radioactive aluminum provided early energy for the activities of forming early 
protoplanets along with explanations where the pre-sources of solar nebula 
material were.  This find of evidence of curium, IMO, is an extension of that 
in some ways and probably vindicates some of the speculation and scientific 
battles Wasserburg and colleagues dealt with after the Allende fall when using 
Allende, moon rocks and meteorites in general to figure out what created our 
local neighborhood  As for all the silly names, given that this is a non-FUN 
CAI that might be a MASHI, the only thing that is clear to me is that this is 
all the work of Lunatics ;) Anyway, I don't think Marie Curie's favorite color 
was pink in that day.  I picture her more pale green and beautifully glowing!

Blue skies & pink CAIs
Doug


-----Original Message-----
From: Zelimir Gabelica via Meteorite-list <[email protected]>
To: mineral <[email protected]>
Cc: Meteoritelist <[email protected]>
Sent: Wed, Mar 9, 2016 11:45 am
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Meteorite reveals rare unstable element

Hello Derek, ListVery exciting reading !For info, I have acquired in 2013 a 
14.7 g Allende fragment that also shows a nice 9.5x5 mm CAI exhibiting a neatly 
distinct pink color (and also a curious reddish-brown color on some of its 
(black) crust areas).I was mainly intrigued by the pink CAI but nobody could 
provide me some explanation. I don't claim the same phenomenon (presence of 
curium) is responsible of that color in my sample but now I can't help 
imagining that the curium hypothesis could possibly also explain the color of 
my CAI. Probably worth some further analysis ?Regards to all,Zelimir----- Mail 
original ----- De: "mineral via Meteorite-list" 
<[email protected]> À: "Meteoritelist" 
<[email protected]> Envoyé: Mercredi 9 Mars 2016 15:15:28 
Objet: [meteorite-list] Meteorite reveals rare unstable element 
http://earthsky.org/space/meteorite-reveals-rare-unstable-element Thanks, 
Derek. ______________________________________________ Visit our Facebook page 
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https://pairlist3.pair.net/mailman/listinfo/meteorite-list -- -- Zelimir 
GABELICA Professeur  Université de Haute-Alsace ENSCMu, Lab. GSEC 3, Rue Alfred 
Werner - F-68093 Mulhouse Cedex Mail : [email protected] 
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