A history of violence: insights into post-accretionary heating in carbonaceous chondrites from volatile element abundances, Zn isotopes, and water contents
Brandon Mahan, Frederic Moynier, Pierre Beck, Emily A. Pringle, and, Julien Siebert

TL;DR
This study analyzes volatile element abundances, Zn isotopes, and water contents in carbonaceous chondrites to understand post-accretionary heating processes and volatile loss mechanisms in early solar system materials.
Contribution
It provides new Zn isotopic and trace element data for multiple CCs, revealing different volatile loss conditions and evidence for open system heating during shock impacts.
Findings
Heated CCs show heavy Zn isotope enrichment.
Volatile depletion scales differ between CM and CR chondrites.
Open system heating caused water and volatile loss during shock events.
Abstract
Carbonaceous chondrites (CCs) may have been the carriers of water, volatile and moderately volatile elements to Earth. Investigating the abundances of these elements, their relative volatility, and isotopes of state-change tracer elements such as Zn, and linking these observations to water contents, provide vital information on the processes that govern the abundances and isotopic signatures of these species in CCs and other planetary bodies. Here we report Zn isotopic data for 28 CCs (20 CM, 6 CR, 1 C2-ung, and 1 CV3), as well as trace element data for Zn, In, Sn, Tl, Pb, and Bi in 16 samples (8 CM, 6 CR, 1 C2-ung, and 1 CV3), that display a range of elemental abundances from case-normative to intensely depleted. We use these data, water content data from literature and Zn isotopes to investigate volatile depletions and to discern between closed and open system heating. Trace element…
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