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Dear
Steven, Michel and Doug,
This
is a fairly good picture of the meteorite. I looks to me like a chondrule-poor
portion of an ordinary chondrite (L or LL), for example like Ramsdorf (L6-S5),
which has large portions without any chondrules as well as the typical
chondrule-bearing material (the latter is rare in Ramsdorf). I have also seem
such kind of material as clasts in LL chondrites, which sometimes can be
cm-size. Keep in mind that some ordinary chondrites don't show any chondrules
due to high metamorphism or impact melting.
Regarding high-K values due to terrestrial
contamination: If this was the case with this stone, it should be reflected also
in high levels of other minor and trace elements such as Na, Ba and
Sr.
There
is a nice publication o K-rich lithologies in ordinary chondrites (i.e. Acfer
066, Acfer 160, HaH 060, Adzhi-Bogdo, Jelica, or Krahenberg (all LL chondrites):
Mineralogy and chemical composition of K-rich
lithology, A.Jaeckel and A.Bischoff, MAPS, 1997, 32, p.A66 (abs.); see also,
MAPS, 1998, 33, p.A77 (abs.)
Best
regards,
J�rn
_______________________________________________________________________________
Joern Koblitz MetBase Editor The MetBase Library of Meteoritics and Planetary Sciences Benquestrasse 27 D-28209 Bremen, Germany phone: +49 421 24 100 24 fax: +49 421 168 2799 email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] _______________________________________________________________________________
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