[meteorite-list] Santa Catharina colors
From: bernd.pauli_at_paulinet.de <bernd.pauli_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Mon Jan 10 18:10:46 2005 Message-ID: <DIIE.000000200000309A_at_paulinet.de> Marcin wrote: > why shale from Santa Catharina has that many colors ? > endpiece Wolf Creek, troilite, identical orange parts Hello Marcin and List, I think oxidation and alteration are the key words here: Both Wolf Creek and Santa Catharina are extremely weathered so the colors they display are those of extremely weathered metallic objects. Just think of heavily corroded terrestrial, metallic objects, which actually show the same or similar color variations. There is limonite, metallic parts, troilite veins and patches (nodules), all kinds of terrestrial oxides. Oxidation has even attacked the teanite matrix, and when these part are etched, there is sometimes excessive blackening. "Troilite is heavily altered to at least two different sulfides, one of which appears to be pentlandite. In addition, free sulfur is present, often as beautiful, yellow incrustations ... " You do not only find sulfides but also phosphides (and copper) which contribute to this oxidation and alteration process, but, V. Buchwald also mentions that "the surprising problem remains, however, that it seems to be the nickel-rich part which is the first to corrode*." *Maybe this has something to do with Brazil's weather and climate conditions ?! Reference: BUCHWALD V.F. (1975) Handbook of Iron Meteorites, Volume 3, 1068-1072. Best wishes and good night from Germany to Poland, Bernd Received on Mon 10 Jan 2005 06:10:45 PM PST |
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