Phil A. Bland’s research while affiliated with Curtin University and other places

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Publications (52)


Perihelion history and atmospheric survival as primary drivers of the Earth`s meteorite record
  • Preprint
  • File available

April 2025

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35 Reads

Patrick M. Shober

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Hadrien A. R. Devillepoix

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Jeremie Vaubaillon

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[...]

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Phil Bland

Models predict that more than half of all impacting meteoroids should be carbonaceous, reflecting the abundance of carbon-rich asteroids in the main belt and near-Earth space. Yet carbonaceous chondrites represent only about 4% of meteorites recovered worldwide. Here we analyse 7,982 meteoroid impacts and 540 potential meteorite falls from 19 global observation networks and demonstrate that intense thermal stress at low perihelion distances coupled with the filtering effect of Earth`s atmosphere explains this mismatch. Meteoroids repeatedly subjected to intense thermal cycling near the Sun fracture and weaken, removing the most friable objects even before atmospheric entry. Our data also show that tidally disrupted meteoroid streams produce especially fragile fragments that rarely survive to the ground. Consequently, compact, higher-strength, thermally cycled bodies dominate the meteorite record. These findings reconcile the predicted carbonaceous flux with its scarcity in collections, underscoring how orbital evolution and atmospheric filtering shape the materials that reach Earth`s surface.

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Orbital distribution of 7,982 impacts detected by EDMOND, CAMS, GMN, FRIPON and EFN networks
Each impact is estimated to be equal to or greater than 10 g (diameter ≿2 cm) at the top of the atmosphere. Orbital distribution is normalized to the impact probability, as calculated using the method of ref. ⁹⁶. Despite this, there still exists a concentration of meteoroids on orbits with q ≈ 1 au.
Apparent initial velocity distribution for sporadic asteroidal top-of-the-atmosphere population versus meteorite fall populations
The top-of-the-atmosphere population is derived from a debiased subset of observations from the EDMOND, CAMS, GMN, FRIPON and EFN impact databases. The meteorite fall observations are taken from the GFO, EFN and FRIPON datasets. vi, velocity relative to the ground or the Earth’s surface.
Orbital density heatmaps comparing sporadic >10 g top-of-atmosphere asteroidal impacts and >1 g meteorite falls
a, Semi-major axis versus eccentricity. b, Semi-major axis versus inclination. c, Inclination versus perihelion distance. d, Inclination versus aphelion distance. The colours indicate percentage differences in normalized density (red, over-represented in the meteorite population; blue, underrepresented in the meteorite population). Statistical significance (chi-squared test) is highlighted by black bins at the 3σ level and all others at 2σ. The dashed lines mark the perihelion evolution (q) as a function of inclination (i) under Kozai–Lidov resonance for orbits with a = 2.5 au.
Perihelion history and atmospheric survival as primary drivers of the Earth’s meteorite record

Nature Astronomy

Models predict that more than half of all impacting meteoroids should be carbonaceous, reflecting the abundance of carbon-rich asteroids in the main belt and near-Earth space. Yet carbonaceous chondrites represent only about 4% of meteorites recovered worldwide. Here we analyse 7,982 meteoroid impacts and 540 potential meteorite falls from 19 global observation networks and demonstrate that intense thermal stress at low perihelion distances coupled with the filtering effect of Earth’s atmosphere explains this mismatch. Meteoroids repeatedly subjected to intense thermal cycling near the Sun fracture and weaken, removing the most friable objects even before atmospheric entry. Our data also show that tidally disrupted meteoroid streams produce especially fragile fragments that rarely survive to the ground. Consequently, compact, higher-strength, thermally cycled bodies dominate the meteorite record. These findings reconcile the predicted carbonaceous flux with its scarcity in collections, underscoring how orbital evolution and atmospheric filtering shape the materials that reach Earth’s surface.


Fig. 1. Micrographs of the shocked martian zircon grain showing key features. (A) cathodoluminescence (cl) image with visible banding in zircon, showing the area analyzed by toF-SiMS. (B) Band contrast (Bc) image from electron backscatter diffraction analysis showing planar features including {112} shock twins, in addition to the locations of teM foil and APt needles. (C to F) toF-SiMS maps showing relative Fe, Y, Na, and Al abundance variations.
Fig. 2. TEM images of nanoinclusions and twin planes within the zircon. (A) distribution of magnetite inclusions within the zircon relative to {112} twins, (B and C) magnetite inclusions within zircon, (D) termination of a zircon {112} twin at magnetite inclusion, and (E and F) {112} deformation twin in zircon, with elevated Fe counts along the twin plane.
Fig. 3. APT reconstruction showing non-formula element distributions in the shocked martian zircon. (A to C) Y, Al, and Fe clusters, and (D) composition of trace element clusters within the zircon showing concentrations of Y, Fe, and Al in units of atomic %.
Zircon trace element evidence for early hydrothermal activity on Mars

November 2024

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459 Reads

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1 Citation

Science Advances

Finding direct evidence for hydrous fluids on early Mars is of interest for understanding the origin of water on rocky planets, surface processes, and conditions essential for habitability, but it is challenging to obtain from martian meteorites. Micro- to nanoscale microscopy of a unique impact-shocked zircon from the regolith breccia meteorite NWA7034 reveals textural and chemical indicators of hydrothermal conditions on Mars during crystallization 4.45 billion years ago. Element distribution maps show sharp alternating zoning defined by marked enrichments of non-formula elements, such as Fe, Al, and Na, and ubiquitous nanoscale magnetite inclusions. The zoning and inclusions are similar to those reported in terrestrial zircon crystallizing in the presence of aqueous fluid and are here interpreted as primary features recording zircon growth from exsolved hydrous fluids at ~4.45 billion years. The unique record of crustal processes preserved in this grain survived early impact bombardment and provides previously unidentified petrological evidence for a wet pre-Noachian martian crust.


Cosmic‐ray exposure age accumulated in near‐Earth space: A carbonaceous chondrite case study

August 2024

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14 Reads

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5 Citations

Meteoritics & Planetary Science

This study investigates the expected cosmic‐ray exposure (CRE) of meteorites if they were to be ejected by a near‐Earth object, that is, from an object already transferred to an Earth‐crossing orbit by an orbital resonance. Specifically, we examine the CRE ages of CI and CM carbonaceous chondrites (CCs), which have some of the shortest measured CRE ages of any meteorite type. A steady‐state near‐Earth carbonaceous meteoroid probability density function is estimated based on the low‐albedo near‐Earth asteroid population, including parameters such as the near‐Earth dynamic lifetime, the impact probability with the Earth, and the orbital parameters. This model was then compared to the orbits and CRE ages of the five CC falls with precisely measured orbits: Tagish Lake, Maribo, Sutter's Mill, Flensburg, and Winchcombe. The study examined two meteoroid ejection scenarios for CI/CM meteoroids: Main Belt collisions and ejections in near‐Earth space. The results indicated that applying a maximum physical lifetime in near‐Earth space of 2–10 Myr to meteoroids and eliminating events evolving onto orbits entirely detached from the Main Belt ( Q < 1.78 au) significantly improved the agreement with the observed orbits of carbonaceous falls. Additionally, the CRE ages of three of the five carbonaceous falls have measured CRE ages one to three orders of magnitude shorter than expected for an object originating from the Main Belt with the corresponding semi‐major axis value. This discrepancy between the expected CRE ages from the model and the measured ages of three of the carbonaceous falls indicates that some CI/CM meteoroids are being ejected in near‐Earth space. This study proposes a nuanced hypothesis involving meteoroid impacts and tidal disruptions as significant contributors to the ejection and subsequent CRE age accumulation of CI/CM chondrites in near‐Earth space.


Incipient space weathering on asteroid 162173 Ryugu recorded by pyrrhotite

May 2024

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86 Reads

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2 Citations

Meteoritics & Planetary Science

Regolith samples returned from asteroid 162173 Ryugu by the Hayabusa2 mission provide direct means to study how space weathering operates on the surfaces of hydrous asteroids. The mechanisms of space weathering, its effects on mineral surfaces, and the characteristic time scales on which alteration occurs are central to understanding the spectroscopic properties and the taxonomy of asteroids in the solar system. Here, we investigate the behavior of the iron monosulfides mineral pyrrhotite (Fe 1− x S) at the earliest stages of space weathering. Using electron microscopy methods, we identified a partially exposed pyrrhotite crystal that morphologically shows evidence for mass loss due to exposure to solar wind ion irradiation. We find that crystallographic changes to the pyrrhotite can be related to sulfur loss from its space‐exposed surface and the diffusive redistribution of resulting excess iron into the interior of the crystal. Diffusion profiles allow us to estimate an order of magnitude of the exposure time of a few thousand years consistent with previous estimates of space exposure. During this interval, the adjacent phyllosilicates did not acquire discernable damage, suggesting that they are less susceptible to alteration by ion irradiation than pyrrhotite.


Brecciation at the grain scale within the lithologies of the Winchcombe Mighei-like carbonaceous chondrite

March 2024

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141 Reads

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4 Citations

Meteoritics & Planetary Science

The Mighei-like carbonaceous (CM) chondrites have been altered to various extents by water-rock reactions on their parent asteroid(s). This aqueous processing has destroyed much of the primary mineralogy of these meteorites, and the degree of alteration is highly heterogeneous at both the macroscale and nanoscale. Many CM meteorites are also heavily brecciated juxtaposing clasts with different alteration histories. Here we present results from the fine-grained team consortium study of the Winchcombe meteorite, a recent CM chondrite fall that is a breccia and contains eight discrete lithologies that span a range of petrologic subtypes (CM2.0-2.6) that are suspended in a cataclastic matrix. Coordinated multitechnique, multiscale analyses of this breccia reveal substantial heterogeneity in the extent of alteration, even in highly aqueously processed lithologies. Some lithologies exhibit the full range and can comprise nearly unaltered coarse-grained primary components that are found directly alongside other coarse-grained components that have experienced complete pseudomorphic replacement by secondary minerals. The preservation of the complete alteration sequence and pseudomorph textures showing tochilinite-cronstedtite intergrowths are replacing carbonates suggest that CMs may be initially more carbonate rich than previously thought. This heterogeneity in aqueous alteration extent is likely due to a combination of microscale variability in permeability and water/rock ratio generating local microenvironments as has been established previously. Nevertheless, some of the disequilibrium mineral assemblages observed, such as hydrous minerals juxtaposed with surviving phases that are typically more fluid susceptible, can only be reconciled by multiple generations of alteration, disruption, and reaccretion of the CM parent body at the grain scale.



Electron microscopy observations of the diversity of Ryugu organic matter and its relationship to minerals at the micro‐ to nano‐scale

January 2024

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185 Reads

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10 Citations

Meteoritics & Planetary Science

Transmission electron microscopy analyses of Hayabusa2 samples show that Ryugu organic matter exhibits a range of morphologies, elemental compositions, and carbon functional chemistries consistent with those of carbonaceous chondrites that have experienced low‐temperature aqueous alteration. Both nanoglobules and diffuse organic matter are abundant. Non‐globular organic particles are also present, and including some that contain nanodiamond clusters. Diffuse organic matter is finely distributed in and around phyllosilicates, forms coatings on other minerals, and is also preserved in vesicles in secondary minerals such as carbonate and pyrrhotite. The average elemental compositions determined by energy‐dispersive spectroscopy of extracted, demineralized insoluble organic matter samples A0107 and C0106 are C 100 N 3 O 9 S 1 and C 100 N 3 O 7 S 1 , respectively, with the difference in O/C slightly outside the difference in the standard error of the mean. The functional chemistry of the nanoglobules varies from mostly aromatic C=C to mixtures of aromatic C=C, ketone C=O, aliphatic (CH n ), and carboxyl (COOH) groups. Diffuse organic matter associated with phyllosilicates has variable aromatic C, ketone and carboxyl groups, and some localized aliphatics, but is dominated by molecular carbonate (CO 3 ) absorption, comparable to prior observations of clay‐bound organic matter in CI meteorites.


In situ investigation of an organic micro‐globule and its mineralogical context within a Ryugu “sand” grain

January 2024

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132 Reads

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2 Citations

Meteoritics & Planetary Science

The Hayabusa2 mission from the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) returned to the Earth samples of carbonaceous asteroid (162173) Ryugu. This mission offers a unique opportunity to investigate in the laboratory samples from a C‐type asteroid, without physical or chemical alteration by the terrestrial atmosphere. Here, we report on an investigation of the mineralogy and the organo‐chemistry of Hayabusa2 samples using a combination of micro‐ and nano‐infrared spectroscopy. Particles investigated with conventional FTIR spectroscopy have spectra dominated by phyllosilicate‐related absorption, as observed for samples of CI‐chondrites, selected ungrouped carbonaceous chondrites, and selected hydrated micrometeorites. Ryugu samples show smaller sulfate‐related absorption than CI‐chondrites. Our samples that were only briefly exposed to the Earth atmosphere show absorptions related to molecular water, revealing fast terrestrial contamination of the spectral signature at 3 μm. Overall, our FTIR data are in agreement with other work done on Ryugu samples, revealing a low degree of mineralogical variability across Ryugu samples. AFM‐IR mapping of the grains shows the presence of a micrometer‐sized organic globule in one of our analyzed grains. The AFM‐IR spectra obtained on this globule are similar to IR spectra obtained on IOM suggesting that it is constituted of refractory organic matter. This globule may host silicate in its interior, with a different mineralogy than bulk Ryugu phyllosilicate. The shape, presence of peculiar silicate, and the nature of organic constituting the globule point toward a pre‐accretionary origin of this globule and that at least part of Ryugu organics were inherited from the protosolar nebulae or the interstellar media. Altogether, our results show the similarities between Ryugu samples and CI chondrites.


FIGURE 2. (a) A low magnification high-angle annular dark field (HAADF) image of the sample A0104-00600303, with colorcoded boxes overlayed to indicate the specific areas that were further examined by EDX and 4D-STEM and which the corresponding high magnification HAADF are shown in (b, c). Both areas examined are magnetite and carbonates free and the brighter regions correspond to Fe-bearing sulfides.
FIGURE 4. (a) Combined virtual dark field image made by 4D-STEM (b) showing Ni-free and Ni-bearing sulfides in the examined area and (b) corresponding STEM-EDS maps. (c-e) Color-coded diffraction patterns corresponding to the different areas of equivalent color shown in (a). Gray areas in (a) correspond to sulfides that could not be indexed due to insufficient diffraction spots in the corresponding DPs. White circles in (e) indicate diffraction spots relevant to the corresponding iron-rich sulfide in (a). Indexing diffraction patterns of (c, d) shows that both the Ni-free and Ni-bearing sulfides are pyrrhotite (f, g).
Four‐dimensional‐STEM analysis of the phyllosilicate‐rich matrix of Ryugu samples

January 2024

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157 Reads

Meteoritics & Planetary Science

Ryugu asteroid grains brought back to the Earth by the Hayabusa2 space mission are pristine samples containing hydrated minerals and organic compounds. Here, we investigate the mineralogy of their phyllosilicate‐rich matrix with four‐dimensional scanning transmission electron microscopy (4D‐STEM). We have identified and mapped the mineral phases at the nanometer scale (serpentine, smectite, pyrrhotite), observed the presence of Ni‐bearing pyrrhotite, and identified the serpentine polymorph as lizardite, in agreement with the reported aqueous alteration history of Ryugu. Furthermore, we have mapped the d‐spacings of smectite and observed a broad distribution of values, ranging from 1 to 2 nm, with an average d‐spacing of 1.24 nm, indicating significant heterogeneity within the sample. Such d‐spacing variability could be the result of either the presence of organic matter trapped in the interlayers or the influence of various geochemical conditions at the submicrometer scale, suggestive of a range of organic compounds and/or changes in smectite crystal chemistry.


Citations (31)


... Such differences in porosity and strength among meteorite classes reflect their distinct collisional compaction histories 44,46 , with carbonaceous chondrites typically retaining higher bulk porosities and lower bulk densities than ordinary chondrites 43 . Moreover, recent evidence based on the irradiation history, isotopic geochemistry and structural heterogeneity of CI/CM carbonaceous meteorites suggests that some CI/CM samples are more consistent with a recent ejection in near-Earth space 47 , possibly tying it to tidal disruptions or meteoroid impacts. This recent lithification and release in near-Earth space provides a more compelling explanation for some of the salient features found in CI/CM chondrites 47 . ...

Reference:

Perihelion history and atmospheric survival as primary drivers of the Earth’s meteorite record
Cosmic‐ray exposure age accumulated in near‐Earth space: A carbonaceous chondrite case study
  • Citing Article
  • August 2024

Meteoritics & Planetary Science

... Similarly, Keller et al. (2010) used EDS analysis to show that 4 keV He + bombardment produces an Sdepleted rim in troilite resulting in an iron surface cladding. In addition to simulations of solar wind irradiation on sulfides, S depletion has also been identified in asteroidal and lunar returned samples, including the Sdepleted, 10 nm thick rims in troilite and pyrrhotite grains from asteroid Itokawa (Burgess & Stroud, 2021;Keller & Berger, 2014;Matsumoto et al., 2020) and in the surface of pyrrhotite grains from Ryugu (Harries et al., 2024). Sulfur depletion was also reported in vesicles in sulfides from Itokawa and the Moon (Matsumoto et al., 2020(Matsumoto et al., , 2021. ...

Incipient space weathering on asteroid 162173 Ryugu recorded by pyrrhotite
  • Citing Article
  • May 2024

Meteoritics & Planetary Science

... This would be followed by a brief final stage of aqueous alteration to lithify Ca-lith into a single unit and result in the precipitation of carbonates into its pores. Other CM chondrites (e.g., Winchcombe) also have unaltered phases juxtaposed with heavily altered material for which multiple stages of brecciation, accretion, and aqueous alteration has been suggested as an explanation (Daly et al., 2024). The H-lith shows the remnants of a TCI-rich matrix and has moderately altered chondrules, indicating that it likely started out as a CM2.2 lithology. ...

Brecciation at the grain scale within the lithologies of the Winchcombe Mighei-like carbonaceous chondrite

Meteoritics & Planetary Science

... This carbonate exhibits the 290.5-eV peak characteristic of the carbonate functional group (Extended Data Fig. 3), but does not diffract as crystals on TEM. Similar amorphous carbonate was observed in Ryugu samples 18,19 . This carbonate could represent an important reservoir of total carbonate ions in Bennu samples, given the abundance of phyllosilicates (about 80 vol.%) 5 . ...

Electron microscopy observations of the diversity of Ryugu organic matter and its relationship to minerals at the micro‐ to nano‐scale
  • Citing Article
  • January 2024

Meteoritics & Planetary Science

... Organic matter was also studied in whole-rock samples by in situ spectro-imaging techniques, and insoluble organic matter (IOM) extracted from Ryugu samples by acid etching was analyzed by the same techniques. The characterization methods included Fouriertransform infrared microscopy (μ-FTIR), infrared nano-spectroscopy (AFM-IR), scanning transmission X-Ray spectroscopy (STXM-XANES), and Raman spectroscopy Dartois et al. 2023;Kebukawa et al. 2024;Mathurin et al. 2024;Phan et al. 2024;Bonal et al. 2024;Quirico et al. 2024;Ito et al. 2022;De Gregorio et al. 2024). ...

In situ investigation of an organic micro‐globule and its mineralogical context within a Ryugu “sand” grain

Meteoritics & Planetary Science

... Carbonate minerals have been reported in the regolith particles of the Ryugu asteroid (Nakamura et al. 2022a, b;Yamaguchi et al. 2023). Some of the carbonate grains on the surface of Ryugu particles have microcrater-like morphologies as evidence for micro-impact (Matsumoto et al. 2024;Tomioka et al. 2025). Micrometeorite impact is known to be one of the major contributors to the space weathering process (Noguchi et al. 2023). ...

Influx of nitrogen-rich material from the outer Solar System indicated by iron nitride in Ryugu samples

Nature Astronomy

... chondrites are undifferentiated meteorites that appear to have formed in the outer regions of the early solar system, beyond the orbit of Jupiter (Kleine et al., 2020;Warren, 2011) and close to the "snowline," a protosolar water-ice boundary (Krot et al., 2015;Lipschutz et al., 1999;Velbel & Zolensky, 2021). Recent studies of sample return from the C-type asteroids Ryugu and Bennu, provide evidence that carbonaceous chondrites are representative specimens of primordial carbonaceous asteroid material (Ito et al., 2022;Noguchi et al., 2023;Yokoyama et al., 2023). The latter makes these meteorites very important for elucidating the processes of asteroid formation and the evolution of their respective parent bodies, such as aqueous alteration and thermal metamorphism (Akai, 1990;Ikeda, 1992;King et al., 2019King et al., , 2021Suttle et al., 2021;Tomeoka, 1990;Tomeoka et al., 1989;Tonui et al., 2002). ...

Mineralogy and petrology of fine‐grained samples recovered from the asteroid (162173) Ryugu
  • Citing Article
  • November 2023

Meteoritics & Planetary Science

... One of the major mission goals is to investigate the composition of organic matter (OM) and its relationship to matrix minerals such as phyllosilicates. OM in extraterrestrial samples comprises small soluble ("SOM") and large insoluble ("IOM") molecules that evolve in diverse circumstellar, interstellar and asteroidal environments and might play an important role for early biomolecule evolution on Earth [6][7][8][9][10][11] . ...

Phyllosilicates with embedded Fe‐based nanophases in Ryugu and Orgueil
  • Citing Article
  • November 2023

Meteoritics & Planetary Science

... One of the major mission goals is to investigate the composition of organic matter (OM) and its relationship to matrix minerals such as phyllosilicates. OM in extraterrestrial samples comprises small soluble ("SOM") and large insoluble ("IOM") molecules that evolve in diverse circumstellar, interstellar and asteroidal environments and might play an important role for early biomolecule evolution on Earth [6][7][8][9][10][11] . ...

Nonequilibrium spherulitic magnetite in the Ryugu samples
  • Citing Article
  • February 2023

Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta

... To sustain internal temperatures high enough to maintain liquid water for this duration, the parent body likely had a radius of at least 50 km (Fujiya et al., 2013). We now understand that Bennu and Ryugu are second or later generation (nth generation) rubble-pile asteroids (Walsh, 2018;Watanabe et al., 2019;Jourdan et al., 2023). While localized, late-stage heating events, such as impacts, cannot be entirely ruled out, the small size of Bennu and Ryugu likely limits their capacity to generate significant impact heating, as any impact would more likely dissipate material from the asteroid rather than heat it (DellaGiustina et al., 2019;Walsh et al., 2022). ...

Rubble pile asteroids are forever

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences