Sorry,, but I guess I was not clear. The only group of silicate-bearing irons widely agreed to have come from an asteroid core is the IVA group. This group has little silicate, mainly small grains of silica, which some think may have been vapor deposited in the core. There are no collisions involved in forming the IVA irons except the one or ones that shattered their parent differentiated asteroid and liberated them. The other silicated irons, i.e., the IAB, IIICD and IIE groups, may be from chondritic, not-differentiated asteroids, that never experienced global melting. These irons may have formed after an impact into the chondritic surface of these bodies involving local melting and separation of the metallic and silicate liquids because they were immiscible. The metal liquid sank to the crater floor, incorporated some rapidly melted silicate debris and cooled. This is a controversial model and not universally accepted. Mesosiderites are differentiated rocks consisting of roughly half metal and half silicate. The silicate is basically basalt and orthopyroxenite, i.e., eucrite and diogenite material. The metal is similar to that of the IIIAB iron meteorites (a differentiated iron group) and so is most likely from the core of a differentiated (i.e., globally melted) asteroid. My model from some years ago was that the iron core (plus overlying mantle) of the projectile impacted the basaltic/orthopyroxenitic surface of another (target) asteroid and formed the mesosiderites. The large gabrroic clasts in many of the mesosiderites seem to have formed by two or more episodes of impact melting, and grain settling. Their origin appears rather different from that of the silicated irons.
Alan

----- Original Message ----- From: "Carl 's" <[email protected]>
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Thursday, September 03, 2009 4:42 PM
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Let's talk about meteorites






OK, I think I see the subtle difference. I have had to re-read Dr. Rubin's post several times to get the picture (Thanks to MikeG, too). Simplified, an asteroid slams into another planetary body right to the iron core and forms mesosiderites. That part I knew, but when smaller iron asteroids slams onto larger rocky asteroids the surface layer forms the silicated irons. I would have thought that would also form mesosiderites, too. Hmmm. Very interesting.

Thank you, Dr. Rubin.

Carl

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