When dating a meteorite, be wary of aluminium-26

Publicly released:
Australia; ACT
Erg Chech 002 specimen. Photo credits: Yuri Amelin
Erg Chech 002 specimen. Photo credits: Yuri Amelin

A new analysis of an old meteorite from the Sahara Desert, by an Australian-led team, suggests that a radioactive chemical known as aluminium-26, may not be as reliable for dating meteorites as previously thought because it was unevenly distributed throughout the solar system.  The team used long-lasting radioactive lead within the meteorite, called ERG Chech 002, to determine it was around 4.566 billion years old. They then compared the amount of aluminium-26 in the ERG Chech 002 meteorite with other meteorites from a similar time and found that the ERG Chech 002 meteorite was higher in aluminium-26 than the other samples, suggesting that aluminium-26 is not distributed evenly throughout the early Solar System. The findings increase our understanding of the early Solar System and may improve the accuracy of determining the ages of very old meteorites.

Media release

From: Springer Nature

Astronomy: Old meteorite provides new insights into the early Solar System

An analysis of the approximately 4.6-billion-year-old meteorite Erg Chech 002, discovered in 2020 in the Erg Chech region of the Sahara Desert in Algeria, is presented in Nature Communications. In combination with previously published data, Aluminium-26 (26Al), a radioactive isotope that was present within the meteorite when it formed, is found to have been spread unevenly throughout our Solar System. The findings increase our understanding of the early Solar System and may improve the accuracy of determining the ages of very old meteorites.

Erg Chech 002 is an andesitic achondrite, a type of stony meteorite among the oldest known of to date. 26Al was a major heat source for early planetary melting and Erg Chech 002’s old age provides an opportunity to further explore the initial distribution of 26Al within the early Solar System. Whether 26Al is distributed evenly throughout the early Solar System is important for determining the ages of meteorites, and understanding the early Solar System, but is debated.

Evgenii Krestianinov and colleagues analysed Erg Chech 002 and determined its lead-isotopic age as about 4.566 billion years old. They then combined this finding with existing data for this meteorite and compared this to other very old meteorites that crystallized from melts. The authors demonstrated that 26Al had an uneven distribution within the early Solar Nebula, likely associated with the late infall of stellar materials with freshly synthesized radionuclides.

Krestianinov and co-authors suggest that meteorite chronology studies should be cautious and take a generalized approach for dating with short-lived isotopes that accounts for their uneven distribution to improve the accuracy and reliability of determining the ages of meteorites and planetary materials.

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Erg Chech 002 specimen
Erg Chech 002 specimen
Erg Chech 002 specimen image 2
Erg Chech 002 specimen image 2
Journal/
conference:
Nature Communications
Research:Paper
Organisation/s: The Australian National University
Funder: The research was supported by Australian Research Council grant DP190100002 “The history of accretion in our Solar System” (Y.A.).
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