Mercury (Hg) in meteorites: variations in abundance, thermal release profile, mass-dependent and mass-independent isotopic fractionation
Matthias M. M. Meier (1, 2), Christophe Cloquet (1), Bernard Marty, (1) ((1) Centre de Recherches P\'etrographiques et G\'eochimiques (CRPG),, Universit\'e de Lorraine, CNRS, (2) Institute of Geochemistry, Petrology,, ETH Zurich)

TL;DR
This study analyzes mercury in meteorites, revealing large concentration variations, isotope fractionation patterns, and implications for Earth's primordial mercury loss and late accretion processes.
Contribution
It provides new insights into Hg abundance, isotopic variations, and thermal release profiles in meteorites, highlighting non-terrestrial origins and planetary implications.
Findings
Large Hg concentration variations among meteorites.
Mass-independent isotope enrichments in carbonaceous chondrites.
Earth's Hg isotopic composition suggests significant primordial loss.
Abstract
We have measured the concentration, isotopic composition and thermal release profiles of Mercury (Hg) in a suite of meteorites, including both chondrites and achondrites. We find large variations in Hg concentration between different meteorites (ca. 10 ppb to 14'000 ppb), with the highest concentration orders of magnitude above the expected bulk solar system silicates value. From the presence of several different Hg carrier phases in thermal release profiles (150 to 650 {\deg}C), we argue that these variations are unlikely to be mainly due to terrestrial contamination. The Hg abundance of meteorites shows no correlation with petrographic type, or mass-dependent fractionation of Hg isotopes. Most carbonaceous chondrites show mass-independent enrichments in the odd-numbered isotopes 199Hg and 201Hg. We show that the enrichments are not nucleosynthetic, as we do not find corresponding…
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