Abstract

AbstractMetal‐rich carbonaceous CB chondrites are generally assumed to be materials accreted from the gas–dust plume formed in catastrophic collisions of planetesimals, at least one of which was differentiated into a metal core and silicate shell. Micron‐sized inclusions of siliceous alkali‐rich glasses associated with sulfides were found in the metal globules of the Sierra Gorda 013 (SG 013), a CBa‐like chondrite. These inclusions are unusual carriers of volatile alkalis which are commonly depleted in CB chondrites. The inclusions are presented by two types: (1) Al‐bearing Nb‐poor glass associated with daubréelite and (2) Nb‐bearing Ca,Al,Mg‐poor glass associated with an unknown Na‐bearing Cr‐sulfide. The glass compositions do not correspond to equilibrium condensation, evaporation, or melting. The Nb‐bearing glass has a superchondritic Nb/Ta ratio (31) most likely indicating the fractionation of Nb and Ta in the high‐temperature gas–dust impact plume due to condensation from vapor or evaporation of precursor Nb‐rich particles. The glasses are interpreted as reaction products between refractory plume condensate particles (or possibly planetary or chondritic solids) with relatively low‐temperature K‐Na‐Si‐rich gas in oxidized conditions, possibly in a common plume vapor reservoir. Compositional differences indicate that the glasses and sulfides originated from several different sources under different fO2, fS2, and T conditions and were likely combined together and transported to the metal globule formation region by material flows in the heterogeneous impact plume. The glass–sulfide particles were enclosed in the globules aggregated from smaller solid or molten metal grains. The metal globules were further melted during transport to the high‐temperature plume region or by plume shockwave heating. Thus, the composition of the glasses, the host metal, and the main mass of SG 013 shows dynamic heterogeneity of physical conditions and impact plume composition after a large‐scale planetesimal collision.

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