This is very interesting. I never thought about the "geologic processes that 
occur AFTER the meteorites are ejected from their asteroidal parent body".
Mike

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/07/080710103903.htm

Source Of The Most Common Meteorites Discovered
ScienceDaily (July 10, 2008) — When observing with the GEMINI telescopes, two 
astronomers from Brazil and the United States discovered for the first time 
asteroids that are similar to “ordinary chondrites”, the most common meteorites 
found on Earth. Until now, astronomers have failed to identify their asteroidal 
sources because of the various geologic processes that occur after the 
meteorites are ejected from their asteroidal parent body.


Astronomy & Astrophysics is publishing the first discovery by T. Mothé-Diniz 
(Brazil) and D. Nesvorný (USA) of asteroids with a spectrum similar to that of 
ordinary chondrites, the meteoritic material that most resembles the 
composition of our Sun. Most of the meteorites that we collect on Earth come 
from the main belt of asteroids located between Mars and Jupiter [1]. They were 
ejected from their asteroidal “parent body” after a collision, were injected 
into a new orbit, and they finally felt onto the Earth. Meteorites are a major 
tool for knowing the history of the solar system because their composition is a 
record of past geologic processes that occurred while they were still 
incorporated in the parent asteroid.

One fundamental difficulty is that we do not know exactly where the majority of 
meteorite specimens come from within the asteroidal main belt. For many years, 
astronomers failed to discover the parent body of the most common meteorites, 
the ordinary chondrites that represent 75% of all the collected meteorites.

To find the source asteroid of a meteorite, astronomers must compare the 
spectra of the meteorite specimen to those of asteroids. This is a difficult 
task because meteorites and their parent bodies underwent different processes 
after the meteorite was ejected. In particular, asteroidal surfaces are known 
to be altered by a process called “space weathering”, which is probably caused 
by micrometeorite and solar wind action that progressively transforms the 
spectra of asteroidal surfaces. Hence, the spectral properties of asteroids 
become different from those of their associated meteorites, making the 
identification of asteroidal parent body more difficult.

Collisions are the main process to affect asteroids. As a consequence of a 
strong impact, an asteroid can be broken up, its fragments following the same 
orbit as the primary asteroid. These fragments constitute what astronomers call 
“asteroid families”. Until recently, most of the known asteroid families have 
been very old (they were formed 100 million to billions of years ago). Indeed, 
younger families are more difficult to detect because asteroids are closer to 
each other [2].

In 2006, four new, extremely young asteroid families were identified, with an 
age ranging from 50000 to 600000 years. These fragments should be less affected 
than older families by space weathering after the initial breakup. Mothé-Diniz 
and Nesvorný then observed these asteroids, using the GEMINI telescopes (one 
located in Hawaii, the other in Chile), and obtained visible spectra. They 
compared the asteroids spectra to the one of an ordinary chondrite (the 
Fayetteville meteorite [3]) and found good agreement.

This discovery is the first observational match between the most common 
meteorites and asteroids in the main belt. It also confirms the role of space 
weathering in altering asteroid surfaces. Identifying the asteroidal parent 
body of a meteorite is a unique tool when studying the history of our solar 
system because one can infer both the time of geological events (from the 
meteorite that can be analyzed through datation techniques) and their location 
in the solar system (from the location of the parent asteroid).

There are only a few exceptions, including the example of the famous meteorites 
coming from Mars. 
After the primary asteroid is disrupted, the fragments move away from each 
other. The older the collision, the greater the distance between fragments. 
Meteorites are named for the place they were collected. The Fayetteville 
meteorite fell near Fayetteville, Arkansas, on December 26, 1934. 



      
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