IIICD meteorites | |
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— Group — | |
The Nantan meteorite, an example of an IIICD meteorite | |
Type | Achondrite |
Class | Primitive achondrite |
Clan | IAB-IIICD-Winonaite |
Composition | Meteoric iron with silicate inclusions containing low-Ca pyroxene, high-Ca pyroxene, olivine, plagioclase, troilite, graphite, phosphates, meteoric iron, traces of daubréelite & chromite |
IIICD meteorites are a group of primitive achondrites. They are classified in a clan together with the IAB meteorites and the winonaites.[1]
IIICD meteorites consists dominantly of meteoric iron with silicate inclusions. The silicate inclusions are almost identical to the IAB meteorite inclusions. They contain low-Ca pyroxene, high-Ca pyroxene, olivine, plagioclase, troilite, graphite, different phosphates, meteoric iron and traces of daubréelite and chromite.[1]
It has been established that IAB meteorites and winonaites originated from the same parent body. The same is not yet clear for IIICD meteorites, that originated from the same or a very similar asteroid.[1]
The IIICD meteorites are classified as primitive achondrites because they have silicate inclusions and show signs of partial melting.[1] The silicate inclusion are almost identical to silicate inclusions in IAB meteorites, and both are very similar to winonaites. For this reason all three are grouped into the IAB-IIICD-Winonaite clan.[2]
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IIICD meteorite.
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