Accretion of the earliest inner Solar System planetesimals beyond the water snowline
Abstract
How and where the first generation of inner Solar System planetesimals formed remains poorly understood. Potential formation regions are the silicate condensation line and water snowline of the solar protoplanetary disk. Whether the chemical compositions of these planetesimals align with accretion at the silicate condensation line (water-free and reduced) or water snowline (water-bearing and oxidized) is, however, unknown. Here we use the Fe/Ni and Fe/Co ratios of magmatic iron meteorites to quantify the oxidation states of the earliest planetesimals associated with non-carbonaceous (NC) and carbonaceous (CC) reservoirs, representing the inner and outer Solar System, respectively. Our results show that the earliest NC planetesimals contained substantial amounts of oxidized Fe in their mantles (3–19 wt% FeO). In turn, we argue that this required the accretion of water-bearing materials into these NC planetesimals. The presence of substantial quantities of moderately and highly volatile elements in their parent cores is also inconsistent with their accretion at the silicate condensation line and favours, instead, their formation at or beyond the water snowline. Similar oxidation states in the early formed parent bodies of NC iron meteorites and those of NC achondrites and chondrites with diverse accretion ages suggest that the formation of oxidized planetesimals from water-bearing materials was widespread in the early history of the inner Solar System.
Copyright and License
© The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Limited 2024.
Acknowledgement
We thank A. P. Vyas for helping to improve the clarity of our communication and we thank C. M. O’D. Alexander, G. Blake, K. Batygin and Y. Miyazaki for fruitful discussions during early stages of the research presented in this study. This study was funded by a Barr Foundation postdoctoral fellowship by Caltech awarded to D.S.G. B.Z. was supported by NASA grants 80NSSC19K1238 and 80NSSC23K0035.
Contributions
D.S.G. conceived the project. D.S.G. compiled the data and performed the numerical calculations along with N.X.N. B.Z. performed the fractional crystallization calculations. A.I. helped with the astrophysical implications. All authors interpreted the data. D.S.G. wrote the manuscript with inputs from N.X.N., B.Z., A.I. and P.D.A.
Data Availability
The authors declare that the data supporting the findings of this study are available within the article and its Extended Data files.
Conflict of Interest
The authors declare no competing interests.
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Additional details
- Barr Foundation
- National Aeronautics and Space Administration
- 80NSSC19K1238
- National Aeronautics and Space Administration
- 80NSSC23K0035
- Caltech groups
- Division of Geological and Planetary Sciences