Abstract

Matrix compositions of 32 carbonaceous chondrites have been analyzed by an electron microprobe defocussed-beam technique. Except in those chondrites that show evidence of metamorphism, matrices are compositionally similar and have correlation coefficients of +0.96 or greater. Weight per cent Mg/Si in matrices is constant (0.82 ± 0.05) but less than ratios derived from bulk analyses. Matrices in metamorphosed meteorites are Mg-depleted relative to those of other chondrites. Al Rais and Renazzo (anomalous by any classification scheme) have Mg-enriched matrices. Average matrix compositions cluster into chemical subgroups similar to those based on bulk chemical and petrographie criteria [C1, C2, C3(0), C3(V)]. C1 matrices are particularly variable in composition from point to point within the same meteorite, but points within individual breccia clasts appear to be more compositionally uniform. Cl matrices are depleted in Na, S, and Ca relative to solar and C2 matrix values, probably as a result of leaching. Matrix Ca/A1 ratios are highly variable and generally fall below the accepted meteoritic value. The only strong interelement correlation is for Fe, Ni, and S in C2 matrices, suggesting mixing of variable proportions of two components: Mg-rich phyllosilicate and a Ni-bearing chalcophile phase. The amount of magnetite associated with C2 matrix appears to vary systematically with matrix composition. Isotopic, chemical, and mineralogical constraints suggest that matrix, although appreciably altered in some meteorites, is chiefly a solar system condensation product which contains an admixture of unprocessed interstellar dust.

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