Cosmic-ray exposure ages of fossil micrometeorites from mid-Ordovician sediments at Lynna River, Russia
Matthias M. M. Meier (1), Birger Schmitz (2), Anders Lindskog (1),, Colin Maden (3), Rainer Wieler (3) ((1) Lund University, Department of, Geology, Lund, Sweden, (2) Lund University, Department of Physics, Lund,, Sweden, (3) ETH Zurich, Department of Earth Sciences, Zurich

TL;DR
This study measures cosmic-ray exposure ages of fossil micrometeorites from mid-Ordovician sediments, revealing their origins, delivery mechanisms, and potential for dating sedimentation and correlating ancient sediments.
Contribution
It provides the first robust cosmic-ray exposure ages for fossil micrometeorites, linking them to specific extraterrestrial events and sedimentation processes.
Findings
CRE ages of a few hundred thousand years were determined.
Fossil micrometeorites likely delivered via orbital resonance.
Sedimentation rates and sediment correlation are possible using CRE ages.
Abstract
We measured the He and Ne concentrations of 50 individual extraterrestrial chromite grains recovered from mid-Ordovician (lower Darriwilian) sediments from the Lynna River section near St. Petersburg, Russia. High concentrations of solar wind-like He and Ne found in most grains indicate that they were delivered to Earth as micrometeoritic dust, while their abundance, stratigraphic position and major element composition indicate an origin related to the L chondrite parent body (LCPB) break-up event, 470 Ma ago. Compared to sediment-dispersed extraterrestrial chromite (SEC) grains extracted from coeval sediments at other localities, the grains from Lynna River are both highly concentrated and well preserved. As in previous work, in most grains from Lynna River, high concentrations of solar wind-derived He and Ne impede a clear quantification of cosmic-ray produced He and Ne. However, we…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
