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Abstract— Oxygen‐isotopic compositions were determined for a suite of enstatite chondrites and aubrites. In agreement with previous work (Clayton et al. , 1984), most samples have O‐isotopic compositions close to the terrestrial fractionation line (TFL), and there appear to be no significant differences in O‐isotopic compositions between individual EH and EL chondrites and aubrites. Five enstatite meteorites have O‐isotopic compositions that are significantly different from the other samples and >0.2% away from the TFL. Two of these have petrographic evidence of brecciation and interaction between other meteorite types; for the other three, similar scenarios are suggested. There appears to be a systematic increase in δ 18 O from enstatite chondrites (both EH and EL) of petrologic type 3 to those of type 6. There is also good evidence that the EH meteorites do not fall along a mass fractionation line but along a line slope 0.66. At the present time, detailed understanding of the origin of these O‐isotopic systematics remain elusive but clearly point to a complex accretion history, parent‐body evolution, or both.
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Jason Newton
Scottish Universities Environmental Research Centre
I. A. Franchi
Goethe University Frankfurt
C. T. Pillinger
The Open University
Meteoritics and Planetary Science
The University of Tokyo
The Open University
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Newton et al. (Sat,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a1efafb95bd0d03bde6b18c — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1945-5100.2000.tb01452.x
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