[meteorite-list] monomict - genomict - polymict

From: bernd.pauli at paulinet.de <bernd.pauli_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: 01 Dec 2006 18:49:51 UT
Message-ID: <DIIE.0000006B00001233_at_paulinet.de>

Steve Arnold wrote:

"I have seen with many eucrites that there is a polymict
 type and a monomict type. What are the differences?

Geoff responded:

"Dear Steve: May I recommend a very useful resource
 to you: The Cambridge Encyclopedia of Meteorites"


Hello All,

On page 344 of the glossary, we find:

monomict breccia:

A brecciated meteorite composed of angular
fragments and matrix all of like composition

On page 345 of the glossary, we find:

polymict breccia:
A rock made up of angular fragments or clasts
from other rocks of different compositions

On page 343 of the glossary, we find:

genomict breccia:

A brecciated meteorite in which the individual clasts are compositionally
of the same group but have differing petrographic characteristics

Wasson puts it this way:

WASSON J.T. (1974) Meteorites Classification and Properties
(Springer-Verlag, Berlin, Heidelberg, New York, Appendix I,
Glossary, p. 242):

Breccia:

A fragmental rock type including components (the larger pieces called
xenoliths or clasts) which were previously part of another rock. In a
*monomict* breccia all components originated in the same rock; in a
*genomict* breccia the components originated in distinct but genetically
closely related rocks; in *polymict* breccias the components originated
in two or more unrelated rocks.

Cheers,

Bernd
Received on Fri 01 Dec 2006 01:49:51 PM PST


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