Abstract

We have determined metallographic cooling rates below 975 K for eight main group (MG) pallasites from Ni profiles across taenite lamellae of known crystallographic orientation in metallic regions with Widmanstätten patterns. Comparison with profiles generated by modeling kamacite growth gave cooling rates ranging from 2.5 to 18 K/Myr. Relative cooling rates were also inferred from the sizes of cloudy zone particles in 28 MG pallasites (86–170 nm) and tetrataenite bandwidths in 20 MG pallasites (1050–2170 nm), as these parameters are positively correlated with each other and negatively correlated with the metallographic cooling rates. These three different techniques show that MG pallasites cooled below 975 K at significantly diverse rates. Since samples from the core–mantle boundary should have indistinguishable cooling rates, MG pallasites could not have cooled at this location. Group IIIAB irons, which were previously thought to be core samples from the MG pallasite body, have faster cooling rates (∼50–350 K/Myr) and smaller cloudy zone particle sizes and tetrataenite bandwidths. This shows that IIIAB irons cooled faster than MG pallasites and could not plausibly be from the same body. The absence of related iron meteorites and achondrites and our thermal constraints suggest that MG pallasites cooled at diverse depths in a pallasitic body consisting of well-mixed olivine and metallic Fe–Ni. Such a body may have formed during an impact on a differentiated asteroid or protoplanet that mixed olivine mantle fragments with residual Ir-poor molten metal from the outermost part of a core that chemically resembled the IIIAB core and was ∼80% fractionally crystallized. Separation of the solid core and most of the associated mantle may have resulted from a grazing hit-and-run impact with a larger protoplanet or asteroid. Thermal calculations suggest that the radius of the pallasitic body was 400 km but the likely presence of a regolith would reduce this estimate considerably.

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