TY - JOUR
T1 - The Creston, California, meteorite fall and the origin of L chondrites
AU - (The Creston Meteorite Consortium)
AU - Jenniskens, Peter
AU - Utas, Jason
AU - Yin, Qing Zhu
AU - Matson, Robert D.
AU - Fries, Marc
AU - Howell, J. Andreas
AU - Free, Dwayne
AU - Albers, Jim
AU - Devillepoix, Hadrien
AU - Bland, Phil
AU - Miller, Aaron
AU - Verish, Robert
AU - Garvie, Laurence
AU - Zolensky, Michael E.
AU - Ziegler, Karen
AU - Sanborn, Matthew E.
AU - Verosub, Kenneth L.
AU - Rowland, Douglas J.
AU - Ostrowski, Daniel R.
AU - Bryson, Kathryn
AU - Laubenstein, Matthias
AU - Zhou, Qin
AU - Li, Qiu Li
AU - Li, Xian Hua
AU - Liu, Yu
AU - Tang, Guo Qiang
AU - Welten, Kees
AU - Caffee, Marc W.
AU - Meier, Matthias M.M.
AU - Plant, Amy A.
AU - Maden, Colin
AU - Busemann, Henner
AU - Granvik, Mikael
N1 - Funding Information:
Acknowledgments—We thank Dominique Hart at NASA Ames Research Center for the photography of the Creston meteorites. We thank Wendy Guglieri, Nancy Hood, and Kevin Heider for supporting the recovery of meteorites. We thank the referees’ careful reading of the manuscript and their helpful comments. SkySentinel is a joint project with the Florida Institute of Technology, Melbourne, Florida. P. J., D. O., and K. B. are supported by the NASA Ames Asteroid Threat Assessment Program. This work was supported by NASA grant NNX14-AR92G (PJ) and NNX14-AM62G and NNX16-AD34G (QZY). Q. Z. acknowledges NSFC grant 41403055. M. M. M. M., A. A. P., and H. B. are supported by grants from the Swiss National Science Foundation. M.G. is supported by grant #299543 from the Academy of Finland.
Funding Information:
We thank Dominique Hart at NASA Ames Research Center for the photography of the Creston meteorites. We thank Wendy Guglieri, Nancy Hood, and Kevin Heider for supporting the recovery of meteorites. We thank the referees? careful reading of the manuscript and their helpful comments. SkySentinel is a joint project with the Florida Institute of Technology, Melbourne, Florida. P. J., D. O., and K. B. are supported by the NASA Ames Asteroid Threat Assessment Program. This work was supported by NASA grant NNX14-AR92G (PJ) and NNX14-AM62G and NNX16-AD34G (QZY). Q. Z. acknowledges NSFC grant 41403055. M. M. M. M., A. A. P., and H. B. are supported by grants from the Swiss National Science Foundation. M.G. is supported by grant #299543 from the Academy of Finland.
Publisher Copyright:
© The Meteoritical Society, 2019.
PY - 2019/4
Y1 - 2019/4
N2 - It has been proposed that all L chondrites resulted from an ongoing collisional cascade of fragments that originated from the formation of the ~500 Ma old asteroid family Gefion, located near the 5:2 mean-motion resonance with Jupiter in the middle Main Belt. If so, L chondrite pre-atmospheric orbits should be distributed as expected for that source region. Here, we present contradictory results from the orbit and collisional history of the October 24, 2015, L6 ordinary chondrite fall at Creston, CA (here reclassified to L5/6). Creston's short 1.30 ± 0.02 AU semimajor axis orbit would imply a long dynamical evolution if it originated from the middle Main Belt. Indeed, Creston has a high cosmic ray exposure age of 40–50 Ma. However, Creston's small meteoroid size and low 4.23 ± 0.07° inclination indicate a short dynamical lifetime against collisions. This suggests, instead, that Creston originated most likely in the inner asteroid belt and was delivered via the ν 6 resonance. The U-Pb systematics of Creston apatite reveals a Pb-Pb age of 4,497.1 ± 3.7 Ma, and an upper intercept U-Pb age of 4,496.7 ± 5.8 Ma (2σ), circa 70 Ma after formation of CAI, as found for other L chondrites. The K-Ar (age ~4.3 Ga) and U,Th-He (age ~1 Ga) chronometers were not reset at ~500 Ma, while the lower intercept U-Pb age is poorly defined as 770 ± 320 Ma. So far, the three known L chondrites that impacted on orbits with semimajor axes a <2.0 AU all have high (>3 Ga) K-Ar ages. This argues for a source of some of our L chondrites in the inner Main Belt. Not all L chondrites originate in a continuous population of Gefion family debris stretching across the 3:1 mean-motion resonance.
AB - It has been proposed that all L chondrites resulted from an ongoing collisional cascade of fragments that originated from the formation of the ~500 Ma old asteroid family Gefion, located near the 5:2 mean-motion resonance with Jupiter in the middle Main Belt. If so, L chondrite pre-atmospheric orbits should be distributed as expected for that source region. Here, we present contradictory results from the orbit and collisional history of the October 24, 2015, L6 ordinary chondrite fall at Creston, CA (here reclassified to L5/6). Creston's short 1.30 ± 0.02 AU semimajor axis orbit would imply a long dynamical evolution if it originated from the middle Main Belt. Indeed, Creston has a high cosmic ray exposure age of 40–50 Ma. However, Creston's small meteoroid size and low 4.23 ± 0.07° inclination indicate a short dynamical lifetime against collisions. This suggests, instead, that Creston originated most likely in the inner asteroid belt and was delivered via the ν 6 resonance. The U-Pb systematics of Creston apatite reveals a Pb-Pb age of 4,497.1 ± 3.7 Ma, and an upper intercept U-Pb age of 4,496.7 ± 5.8 Ma (2σ), circa 70 Ma after formation of CAI, as found for other L chondrites. The K-Ar (age ~4.3 Ga) and U,Th-He (age ~1 Ga) chronometers were not reset at ~500 Ma, while the lower intercept U-Pb age is poorly defined as 770 ± 320 Ma. So far, the three known L chondrites that impacted on orbits with semimajor axes a <2.0 AU all have high (>3 Ga) K-Ar ages. This argues for a source of some of our L chondrites in the inner Main Belt. Not all L chondrites originate in a continuous population of Gefion family debris stretching across the 3:1 mean-motion resonance.
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U2 - 10.1111/maps.13235
DO - 10.1111/maps.13235
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85060336689
SN - 1086-9379
VL - 54
SP - 699
EP - 720
JO - Meteoritics and Planetary Science
JF - Meteoritics and Planetary Science
IS - 4
ER -