>From ASU: http://asunews.asu.edu/20100823_bouvier

Timescales of early Solar System processes rely on precise, accurate and 
consistent ages obtained with radiometric dating. However, recent advances in 
instrumentation now allow scientists to make more precise measurements, some of 
which are revealing inconsistencies in the ages of samples. Seeking better 
constraints on the age of the Solar System, Arizona State University 
researchers Audrey Bouvier and Meenakshi Wadhwa analyzed meteorite Northwest 
Africa (NWA) 2364 and found that the age of the Solar System predates previous 
estimates by up to 1.9 million years.

By using a dating technique known as lead-lead dating, Bouvier and Wadhwa were 
able to calculate the age of a calcium-aluminum-rich inclusion (CAI) contained 
within the Northwest Africa 2364 chondritic meteorite. These CAIs are thought 
to be the first solids to condense from the cooling protoplanetary disk during 
the birth of the Solar System.

The study’s findings, published online on August 22 in Nature Geoscience, fix 
the age of the Solar System at 4.5682 billion years old, between 0.3 and 1.9 
million years older than previous estimates. This relatively small revision to 
the currently accepted age of about 4.56 billion years is significant since 
some of the most important events that shaped the Solar System occurred within 
the first ~10 million years of its formation.

“This relatively small age adjustment means that there was as much as twice the 
amount of iron-60, a certain short-lived isotope of iron, in the early Solar 
System than previously determined. This higher initial abundance of this 
isotope in the Solar System can only be explained by supernova injection,” said 
Bouvier, a faculty research associate in the School of Earth and Space 
Exploration (SESE) in ASU’s College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. “This 
supernova event, and possibly others, could have triggered the formation of the 
Solar System. By studying meteorites and their isotopic characteristics, we 
bring new clues about the stellar environment of our Sun at birth.”

According to Meenakshi Wadhwa, professor in SESE and director of the Center for 
Meteorite Studies, “This work also helps to resolve some long-standing 
inconsistencies in early Solar System time scales as obtained by different 
high-resolution chronometers. However, there is certainly room for future 
studies. In particular, it will be important to conduct high precision 
chronologic investigations of CAIs from other pristine meteorites. We also need 
to understand the reasons for why the CAIs measured previously from two other 
chondritic meteorites, Allende and Efremovka, have yielded younger ages.”

One significant aspect of this study is that it is the first published 
lead-lead isotopic investigation that takes into account the possible variation 
of the uranium isotope composition. Earlier work conducted in Wadhwa’s 
laboratory by ASU graduate student Gregory Brennecka, in collaboration with 
SESE professor Ariel Anbar, has shown that the uranium isotope composition of 
CAIs, long assumed to be constant, can in fact be highly variable and this has 
important implications for the calculation of the precise lead-lead ages of 
these objects.

Using the relationship demonstrated by Brennecka and colleagues between the 
uranium isotope composition and other geochemical indicators in CAIs, Bouvier 
and Wadhwa inferred a uranium isotope composition for the CAI for which they 
reported the lead-lead age. Future work at ASU will focus on development of 
analytical techniques for the direct measurement of the precise uranium isotope 
composition of CAIs for which lead-lead isotopic investigations are being 
conducted.

“Our work can help researchers better understand the sequence of events that 
took place within the first few million years of the Solar system formation, 
such as the accretion and melting of planetary bodies,” Bouvier said. ”All 
these processes happened extremely rapidly, and only by reaching such a 
precision on isotopic measurements and chronology can we find out about these 
processes of planetary formation.”

Nikki Staab, [email protected]
602-710-7169
School of Earth and Space Exploration

Gary Fujihara
Big Kahuna Meteorites (IMCA#1693)
105 Puhili Place, Hilo, Hawai'i 96720
http://bigkahuna-meteorites.com/
http://shop.ebay.com/fujmon/m.html  
(808) 640-9161

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