The iron record of asteroidal processes in carbonaceous chondrites
A. Garenne, P. Beck, G. Montes-Hernandez, L. Bonal, E. Quirico, O., Proux, J.L. Hazemann

TL;DR
This study uses iron valence states via X-ray spectroscopy to analyze secondary processes like thermal metamorphism and aqueous alteration in various carbonaceous chondrites, revealing correlations with alteration degree and thermal history.
Contribution
It provides detailed insights into iron oxidation states across different chondrite groups, linking mineralogical evolution to alteration processes and thermal history.
Findings
Fe3+ to Fe2+ conversion correlates with aqueous alteration in CM chondrites.
CR chondrites show coexistence of multiple iron oxidation states, indicating complex alteration history.
Iron valence in CV chondrites relates more to thermal history than aqueous alteration.
Abstract
The valence of iron has been used in terrestrial studies to trace the hydrolysis of primary silicate rocks. Here, we use a similar approach to characterize the secondary processes, namely thermal metamorphism and aqueous alteration, that have affected carbonaceous chondrites. X-ray absorption near-edge structure spectroscopy at the Fe-K- edge was performed on a series of 36 CM, 9 CR, 10 CV, and 2 CI chondrites. Among the four carbonaceous chondrites groups studied, a correlation between the iron oxidation index (IOI = [2 ((Fe2+) + 3(Fe3+))/FeTOT) and the hydrogen content is observed. However, within the CM group, for which a progressive alteration sequence has been defined, a conversion of Fe3+ to Fe2+ is observed with increasing degree of aqueous alteration. This reduction of iron can be explained by an evolution in the mineralogy of the secondary phases. In the case of the few CM…
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