Systems of grouping meteorites based on shared characteristics
In
meteoritics, a meteorite classification system attempts to group similar
meteorites and allows scientists to communicate with a standardized terminology when discussing them. Meteorites are classified according to a variety of characteristics, especially
mineralogical,
petrological,
chemical, and
isotopic properties.
Terminology
There is no single, standardized terminology used in meteorite classification; however, commonly used terms for categories include types, classes, clans, groups, and subgroups. Some researchers hierarchize these terms, but there is no consensus as to which hierarchy is most appropriate. Meteorites that do not fit any known group (though they may fit somewhere within a higher level of classification) are ungrouped.
Genetic relationships
Meteorite classification may indicate that a "genetic" relationship exists between similar meteorite specimens. Similarly classified meteorites may share a common origin, and therefore may come from the same
astronomical object (such as a
planet,
asteroid, or
moon) known as a parent body. However, with current scientific knowledge, these types of relationships between meteorites are difficult to prove.
Traditional classification scheme
Meteorites are often divided into three overall categories based on whether they are dominantly composed of rocky material (
stony meteorites), metallic material (
iron meteorites), or mixtures (
stony–iron meteorites). These categories have been in use since at least the early 19th century but do not have much genetic significance; they are simply a traditional and convenient way of grouping specimens. In fact, the term "stony iron" is a misnomer as currently used. One group of chondrites (CB) has over 50% metal by volume and contains meteorites that were called stony irons until their affinities with chondrites were recognized. Some iron meteorites also contain many
silicateinclusions but are rarely described as stony irons.
Nevertheless, these three categories sit at the top of the most widely used meteorite classification system. Stony meteorites are then traditionally divided into two other categories: chondrites (groups of meteorites that have undergone little change since their parent bodies originally formed and are characterized by the presence of
chondrules), and
achondrites (groups of meteorites that have a complex origin involving asteroidal or
planetary differentiation). The iron meteorites were traditionally divided into objects with similar internal structures (
octahedrites,
hexahedrites, and
ataxites), but these terms are now used for purely descriptive purposes and have given way to modern chemical groups. Stony–iron meteorites have always been divided into
pallasites (which are now known to comprise several distinct groups) and
mesosiderites (a textural term that is also synonymous with the name of a modern group).
Below is a representation of how the meteorite groups fit into the more traditional classification hierarchy:[1]
Two alternative general classification schemes were recently published, illustrating the lack of consensus on how to classify meteorites beyond the level of groups. In the Krot et al. scheme (2003)[4] the following hierarchy is used:
where irons and stony–irons are considered to be achondrites or primitive achondrites, depending on the group.
History
Modern meteorite classification was worked out in the 1860s,[1] based on
Gustav Rose's and
Nevil Story Maskelyne's classifications. Gustav Rose worked on the meteorite collection of the
Museum für Naturkunde,
Berlin and Maskelyne on the collection of the
British Museum,
London.[6][7] Rose was the first to make different categories for meteorites with chondrules (chondrites) and without (nonchondrites). Story-Maskelyne differentiated between siderites, siderolites and aerolites (now called
iron meteorites,
stony-iron meteorites and
stony meteorite, respectively).[1]
In 1872
Gustav Tschermak published his first meteorite classification based on Gustav Rose's catalog from 1864:
(Sh)
Shalkite: Granular. Olivine and bronzite. [[Tschermak had included this category from Rose (1863), but he discovered in 1883 that the Shalka meteorite did not contain any olivine and proposed the term "diogenite" for hypersthene achondrites.[9]]]
George Thurland Prior further improved the classification based on mineralogical and chemical data,[12][13] introducing the terms
mesosiderite,
lodranite and
enstatite chondrite.[14] In 1923 he published a catalogue of the meteorites in the
Natural History Museum (
London). He describes his classification as based on Gustav Tschermak and Aristides Brezina with modifications by himself. His main subdivisions were:
Meteoric Irons or Siderites
Meteoric Stony-irons or Siderolites
Meteoric Stones or Aerolites.
He subdivides the "Meteoric Stones" into those that have chondrules (Chondritic Meteoric Stones or Chondrites) and those that don't (Non-chondritic Meteoric Stones or Achondrites). The iron meteorites are subdivided according to their structures as
ataxites,
hexahedrites and
octahedrites.[15] A complete overview of his classification is given in the box below:
^Wasson, J. T.; Kallemeyn, G. W. (July 2002). "The IAB iron-meteorite complex: A group, five subgroups, numerous grouplets, closely related, mainly formed by crystal segregation in rapidly cooling melts". Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta. 66 (13): 2445–2473.
Bibcode:
2002GeCoA..66.2445W.
doi:
10.1016/S0016-7037(02)00848-7.
hdl:2060/20020080608.
^Norton, O. Richard (2002). The Cambridge encyclopedia of meteorites (1. publ. ed.). Cambridge [u.a.]: Cambridge Univ. Press.
ISBN0-521-62143-7.
^Krot, A.N.; Keil, K.; Scott, E.R.D.; Goodrich, C.A.; Weisberg, M.K. (2003). "Classification of meteorites". In Holland, Heinrich D.; Turekian, Karl K. (eds.). Treatise on Geochemistry. Vol. 1.
Elsevier. pp. 83–128.
doi:
10.1016/B0-08-043751-6/01062-8.
ISBN978-0-08-043751-4.
^Weisberg et al. (2006) Systematics and Evaluation of Meteorite Classification. In, Meteorites and the Early Solar System II, 19-52 (D.S. Lauretta and H.Y. McSween, Eds.), Univ. Arizona press
^Rose, Gustav (1864). Beschreibung und Eintheilung der Meteoriten auf Grund der Sammlung im mineralogischen Museum zu Berlin (in German). Berlin: Königlichen Akademie der Wissenschaften: in Commission bei F. Dümmler's Verlags-Buchhandlung Harrwitz und Gossmann. p. 161.
^Maskelyne, Nevil Story (c. 1863). Catalogue of the Collection of Meteorites exhibited in the Mineral Department of the British Museum. London: Woodfall & Kinder.
^Arestides, Brezina (1885). Die Meteoritensammlung des k. k. mineralogischen Hofkabinetes in Wien am 1. Mai 1885.
^Mason, Brian (24 September 1963).
"The Hypersthene Achondrites"(PDF). American Museum Novitates (2155): 1–13. Retrieved 29 December 2012.
^Tschermak, Gustav (1883). "Die Mikroskopische Beschaffenheit der Meteoriten erläutert durch photographische Abbildungen". Smithsonian Contributions to Astrophysics. 4. Stuttgart: E. Koch: 137.
Bibcode:
1964SCoA....4..137T.