Title of article
The effects of parent-body hydrothermal heating on amino acid abundances in CI-like chondrites
Author/Authors
Burton، نويسنده , , Aaron S. and Grunsfeld، نويسنده , , Sarah and Elsila، نويسنده , , Jamie E. and Glavin، نويسنده , , Daniel P. and Dworkin، نويسنده , , Jason P.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2014
Pages
9
From page
255
To page
263
Abstract
We determined the amino acid abundances and enantiomeric compositions of the Antarctic CI1 carbonaceous chondrites Yamato (Y)-86029 and Y-980115, as well as the Ivuna and Orgueil CI1 carbonaceous chondrites by liquid chromatography with fluorescence detection and time-of-flight mass spectrometry. Y-86029 and Y-980115 both show evidence of parent-body heating (500–600 °C) in addition to aqueous alteration, while Ivuna and Orgueil only show evidence for aqueous alteration. In contrast to Ivuna and Orgueil, which each contain ∼70 nmol/g of amino acids in acid-hydrolyzed, water extracts, both heated Yamato CI meteorites contain only low levels of amino acids that were primarily l-enantiomers of proteinogenic amino acids, indicating that they are likely to be terrestrial in origin. Because indigenous amino acids have been found in meteorites that have experienced metamorphic temperatures of >1000 °C with only minimal aqueous alteration, heating alone is not sufficient to explain the lack of amino acids in Y-86029 and Y-980115. Rather, our data suggest that the combination of heating and aqueous alteration has a profound destructive effect on amino acids in meteorites. This finding has implications for the origins of amino acids and other molecules in the early evolution of our solar system.
Keywords
Meteorite , Amino acid , Aqueous alteration , Thermal metamorphism , CI chondrite
Journal title
Polar Science
Serial Year
2014
Journal title
Polar Science
Record number
2317476
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