- H chondrite
The H type
ordinary chondrite s are the most common type ofmeteorite , accounting for approximately 40% of all those catalogued, 46% of the ordinary chondrites, and 44% of thechondrite s1.The name comes from their (H)igh iron abundance, with respect to other
ordinary chondrite s, which is about 25-31% by weight. Over half of this is present in a free state, making these meteorites strongly magnetic despite the stonychondritic appearance.A probable parent body for this group is the
S-type asteroid 6 Hebe , with less likely candidates being3 Juno and7 Iris 2. It is supposed that these meteorites arise from impacts onto smallnear-earth asteroid s broken off from6 Hebe in the past, rather than originating from 6 Hebe directly. The H chondrites have very similar trace element abundances andOxygen isotope ratios to theIIE iron meteorite s, making it likely that they both originate from the same parent body.The most abundant minerals are
bronzite (anorthopyroxene ), andolivine . Characteristic is thefayalite (Fa) content of the olivine of 16 to 20 mol%. They contain also 15-19% ofnickel-iron metal and about 5% oftroilite . The majority of these meteorites have been significantly metamorphosed, with over 40% being in petrologic class 5, most of the rest in classes 4 and 6. Only a few (about 2.5%) are of the largely unaltered petrologic class 3.Historically, the H chondrites have been named "bronzite chondrites" or "olivine bronzite chondrites" for the dominant minerals, but these terms are now obsolete.
References
# [http://internt.nhm.ac.uk/jdsml/research-curation/projects/metcat/metsPerGroup.dsml Natural History Museum, meteorite catalogue]
# [http://adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-bib_query?bibcode=1998M%26PS...33.1281G&db_key=AST&data_type=HTML&format=&high=438c93072f28336 M. J. Gaffey & S. L. Gilbert "Asteroid 6 Hebe: The probable parent body of the H-Type ordinary chondrites and the IIE iron metorites"] ,Meteoritics & Planetary Science , Vol. 33, p. 1281 (1998).
# [http://www.meteorite.fr/en/classification/ordinarychon.htm www.meteorite.fr]External links
* [http://www.meteorite.fr/en/classification/ordinarychon.htm All About Meteorites]
* [http://internt.nhm.ac.uk/jdsml/research-curation/projects/metcat/metsPerGroup.dsml The Catalogue of Meteorites]
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