File:Carbonaceous chondrite (Allende Meteorite) (4.560-4.568 Ga) 13.jpg

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English: Carbonaceous chondrite - individual of the Allende Meteorite from Mexico.

Carbonaceous chondrites are dark gray to blackish-colored chondrite meteorites with a relatively carbon-rich matrix. The first large sampling of carbonaceous chondrites available to meteoriticists came with the 1969 fall of the Allende Meteorite. Before Allende, carbonaceous chondrite material was exceedingly rare. Allende has become the most heavily studied and the most famous carbonaceous chondrite.

Allende impacted on Earth at 1:05 AM on 8 February 1969. Its known strewn field trends southwest-to-northeast in the vicinity of the town of Allende in southeastern Chihuahua State, northern Mexico.

The specimen seen here has a mostly-intact, blackish-colored fusion crust. The lighter-colored areas are "windows" into the interior. Allende has small, spherical to subspherical structures called chondrules (all chondrites have these). Allende also contains whitish, irregularly-shaped patches called CAIs (“calcium-aluminum inclusions”), composed of high-temperature Ca-Al-Ti silicate and oxide minerals. The fine-grained, carbon-rich matrix consists of Fe-olivine and poorly graphitized carbon. A few tiny specks of metallic iron-nickel alloy also occur.

Allende rocks represent the near-oldest meteoritic material known. The olivine chondrules in Allende rocks date to 4.560 billion years. The CAIs in Allende rocks date to 4.568 billion years.
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Source https://www.flickr.com/photos/47445767@N05/52805810362/
Author James St. John

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This image was originally posted to Flickr by James St. John at https://flickr.com/photos/47445767@N05/52805810362. It was reviewed on 13 April 2023 by FlickreviewR 2 and was confirmed to be licensed under the terms of the cc-by-2.0.

13 April 2023

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