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Coesite in suevites from the Chesapeake Bay impact structure
Author(s) -
Jackson John C.,
Horton J. Wright,
Chou IMing,
Belkin Harvey E.
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
meteoritics and planetary science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.09
H-Index - 100
eISSN - 1945-5100
pISSN - 1086-9379
DOI - 10.1111/maps.12638
Subject(s) - coesite , quartz , mineralogy , texture (cosmology) , geology , materials science , composite material , paleontology , eclogite , subduction , tectonics , image (mathematics) , artificial intelligence , computer science
The occurrence of coesite in suevites from the Chesapeake Bay impact structure is confirmed within a variety of textural domains in situ by Raman spectroscopy for the first time and in mechanically separated grains by X‐ray diffraction. Microtextures of coesite identified in situ investigated under transmitted light and by scanning electron microscope reveal coesite as micrometer‐sized grains (1–3 μm) within amorphous silica of impact‐melt clasts and as submicrometer‐sized grains and polycrystalline aggregates within shocked quartz grains. Coesite‐bearing quartz grains are present both idiomorphically with original grain margins intact and as highly strained grains that underwent shock‐produced plastic deformation. Coesite commonly occurs in plastically deformed quartz grains within domains that appear brown (toasted) in transmitted light and rarely within quartz of spheroidal texture. The coesite likely developed by a mechanism of solid‐state transformation from precursor quartz. Raman spectroscopy also showed a series of unidentified peaks associated with shocked quartz grains that likely represent unidentified silica phases, possibly including a moganite‐like phase that has not previously been associated with coesite.

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