Terrestrial modification of the Ivuna meteorite and a reassessment of the chemical composition of the CI type specimen
A. J. King, K. J. H. Phillips, S. Strekopytov, C. Vita-Finzi, S. S., Russell

TL;DR
This study examines terrestrial modifications of the Ivuna meteorite, the most pristine CI chondrite, revealing how storage conditions affect its mineralogy and composition, and providing an updated average composition consistent with solar abundances.
Contribution
The paper provides a detailed comparison of two Ivuna meteorite samples, highlighting the impact of terrestrial weathering and proposing guidelines for preserving pristine samples.
Findings
BM2008 M1 is the most pristine Ivuna sample stored in nitrogen.
BM1996 M4 shows recent sulphate formation due to terrestrial weathering.
The new average composition aligns with previous CI chondrite data and solar abundances.
Abstract
The rare CI carbonaceous chondrites are the most aqueously altered and chemically primitive meteorites but due to their porous nature and high abundance of volatile elements are susceptible to terrestrial weathering. The Ivuna meteorite, type specimen for the CI chondrites, is the largest twentieth-century CI fall and least affected by terrestrial alteration. The main mass of Ivuna (BM2008 M1) has been stored in a nitrogen atmosphere at least since 2008 and is the most pristine CI chondrite stone. We report the mineralogy, petrography and bulk elemental composition of BM2008 M1 and a second Ivuna stone (BM1996 M4) stored in air. Both Ivuna stones are breccias consisting of multiple rounded, phyllosilicate-rich clasts formed through aqueous alteration followed by impact processing. A polished thin section of BM2008 M1 analysed immediately after preparation was found to contain…
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.
