skip to main content
US FlagAn official website of the United States government
dot gov icon
Official websites use .gov
A .gov website belongs to an official government organization in the United States.
https lock icon
Secure .gov websites use HTTPS
A lock ( lock ) or https:// means you've safely connected to the .gov website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.


Search for: All records

Creators/Authors contains: "Asimow, Paul D"

Note: When clicking on a Digital Object Identifier (DOI) number, you will be taken to an external site maintained by the publisher. Some full text articles may not yet be available without a charge during the embargo (administrative interval).
What is a DOI Number?

Some links on this page may take you to non-federal websites. Their policies may differ from this site.

  1. Abstract We report the discovery of (Al,Cu)‐bearing metallic alloys in two micrometeorites found in the Project Stardust collection gathered from urban rooftop environments in Norway. Most of the alloys are the same as those found in the Khatyrka meteorite and other micrometeorites, though one has a composition that has not been reported previously. Oxygen isotope ratio measurements using secondary ion mass spectrometry show that the Project Stardust samples reported here, like all earlier examples of natural (Al,Cu)‐bearing alloys, contain material of chondritic affinity. 
    more » « less
    Free, publicly-accessible full text available July 1, 2026
  2. Debate regarding early Earth differentiation focuses on the fate, nature, origin, volume, and processes responsible for protocrust(s) and felsic crust formation. One specific aspect of this debate is how Hadean zircons and their felsic parental magmas fit with an expected ultramafic environment. Based on our new experiments, thermodynamic modeling, and elemental partitioning, we infer that felsic liquids could have been generated by shallow (< 20 km) interaction between primordial hydrated peridotite (serpentinite) and basaltic magmas. Felsic melts (SiO2 ≥ 55 wt%) can be generated at a maximum melt fraction of 0.4 when starting serpentinite:basalt mass ratio is high (i.e., higher than 1.5:1). Here we show that felsic melts obtained in our experimental runs can account for the Hf isotope evolutionary array displayed by Hadean detrital zircons worldwide. We propose that open system interactions between serpentinite and basaltic melts at the end of the magma ocean stage after magma degassing and water ocean precipitation allowed the formation of extensive early Hadean felsic crust (4.4 - 4.5 Gy ago). Our calculations indicate that this felsic crust accounts for up to 50% of present-day continental crust mass. The abundant production of primordial felsic crust throughout the Hadean could be due to the impact-induced melting owing to frequent impacts. A similar process could have also occurred on Mars, and other rocky planets, provided that water was abundant at shallow and surficial levels, which would account for the existence of a thick felsic crust. The serpentinised protocrust had a dual role in the primitive planetary environment: to provide the first and most abundant felsic crust and to facilitate the emergence of life in the shallow hydrothermal environments of water-bearing terrestrial planets. 
    more » « less
    Free, publicly-accessible full text available December 2, 2025
  3. Abstract Hadean zircons provide a potential record of Earth's earliest subduction 4.3 billion years ago. It remains enigmatic how subduction could be initiated so soon after the presumably Moon‐forming giant impact (MGI). Earlier studies found an increase in Earth's core‐mantle boundary (CMB) temperature due to the accumulation of the impactor's core, and our recent work shows Earth's lower mantle remains largely solid, with some of the impactor's mantle potentially surviving as the large low‐shear velocity provinces (LLSVPs). Here, we show that a hot post‐impact CMB drives the initiation of strong mantle plumes that can induce subduction initiation ∼200 Myr after the MGI. 2D and 3D thermomechanical computations show that a high CMB temperature is the primary factor triggering early subduction, with enrichment of heat‐producing elements in LLSVPs as another potential factor. The models link the earliest subduction to the MGI with implications for understanding the diverse tectonic regimes of rocky planets. 
    more » « less
  4. The mantle section of the Late Neoproterozoic Tays ophiolite in the Arabian Shield consists principally of thoroughly serpentinized peridotite with characteristics typical of depleted mantle protoliths from a fore-arc environment. The serpentinite is altered along shear zones and thrust planes to gold-bearing listvenite bodies of various sizes. These bodies are divided into carbonate listvenite and silica‐carbonate listvenite; they may be dyke-like or lenticular in form, and are yellowish-brown, reddish-brown, or greyish in outcrop. Carbonate list- venite expresses schistose deformation fabrics concordant to fabric in the host serpentinite, whereas silica‐car- bonate listvenite is undeformed at field scale and contains a generation of undeformed minerals at thin-section scale. Silica‐carbonate listvenite contains Cr-rich muscovite (fuchsite) and base-metal sulfides and is enriched in Zn, Pb, Cu, Ag, and Au along with SiO2. The transformation of serpentinite along shear zones to different types of listvenite reflects successive episodes of fluid-mediated metasomatism. Carbonate listvenite develops first, driven by infiltration of CO2–bearing fluids during serpentinization of the original fore-arc peridotite. Silica‐carbonate listvenite marks a later episode associated with infiltration of K-bearing, SiO2-saturated fluids released during emplacement of the ophiolite. Listvenitization in the Tays serpentinite concentrated gold in sub-economic to economic extents, with concentrations increasing from host serpentinite (2–4 ng/g) to carbonate listvenite (267–937 ng/g) to silica‐carbonate listvenite (1717–3324 ng/g). 
    more » « less
  5. Composite mantle xenoliths from the Cima Volcanic Field (CA, USA) contain a variety of melt (now glassy) inclusions hosted within mantle phases. The compositions and textures of these melt inclusions have the po- tential to constrain their trapping processes, melt sources, and the rates of ascent of their parent xenoliths. Here we focus on unusual spinel-hosted melt inclusions from one composite xenolith, reporting glass and daughter mineral compositions and textures and attempting to reconstruct inclusion bulk compositions. The xenolith contains spinel-hosted melt inclusions in its harzburgite, olivine-websterite and lherzolite layers; there are none in its orthopyroxenite layer. The glass compositions and reconstructed bulk compositions of the partly-crystallized inclusions correspond to alkaline intermediate melts, mostly trachyandesites. Such melts are most likely to be generated and trapped by vapor-undersaturated phlogopite or amphibole dehydration melting to an assemblage of liquid + spinel + olivine ± pyroxenes. We modeled the near-liquidus phase relations of the inclusion bulk compositions and noted the closest approach of each inclusion to simultaneous saturation with spinel and either phlogopite or amphibole, resulting in estimated trapping pressures of ~0.5–1.5 GPa and temperatures of ~1000–1100 ◦C. The large size of the hosting spinel grains suggests a slow process associated with these breakdown reactions, probably thinning of the lithosphere and steepening of the geotherm during regional extension. A linear correlation between the vesicle area and inclusion area (as proxies for volume) suggests an in-situ exsolution process from melts of relatively uniform volatile initial contents, consistent with trapping of vapor- undersaturated melts that later exsolve vapor during cooling and daughter crystal growth. A negative correla- tion between the glass content in melt inclusions and the size of the inclusion itself suggests a control on the degree of crystallinity with the size. There appears to be a two-stage cooling history captured by the inclusions, forming first prismatic daughter crystals and large round vesicles at the wall of the inclusion, followed by quenching to form a mat of fine crystallites and small vesicles in most inclusions. We connect the final quench to rapid ascent of the xenolith in its host melt, which also triggered partial breakdown of remaining amphibole to fine glassy symplectites. 
    more » « less
  6. The Wadi Al-Baroud area, in Egypt’s Eastern Desert, exposes Neoproterozoic rocks of the Arabian-Nubian Shield (ANS), including both syntectonic granitoids (granodiorite and tonalite) and post-collisional granites. We present field work, petrographic study, mineral compositions, and whole-rock geochemistry results from these granitoids and discuss their petrogenesis, magmatic sources, evolution, and tectonic significance. The syntectonic granitoids show subduction affinity and an anomalous steep trend of K-enrichment that suggests assimilation of a granitic component during their evolution. The post-collisional granites form two plutons, on opposite sides of Wadi Al- Baroud, named here the Ras Baroud pluton (RBP) and the Abu Hawis pluton (AHP). They intruded the syn- tectonic granitoids with sharp intrusive contacts. The post-collisional plutons are devoid of mafic enclaves and are cut by very few dikes. They dominantly consist of biotite monzogranite that grades into muscovite mon- zogranite. The latter lithology hosts Nb-Ta oxide minerals (columbite, tantalite, and wodginite) displaying a variety of textural and compositional features. The cores are primary columbite-(Mn), whereas rims are over- grown or partly replaced by tantalite-(Fe) and wodginite due to late interactions with highly fractionated re- sidual melt. The highly-evolved AHP and RBP granites are typical of the post-collisional granitoids of the ANS, including high concentrations of rare earth elements (REE), Ta, Hf, Nb, Zr, Y, and Rb; elevated ratios of Ga/Al; and low contents of Sr, CaO, and MgO. Their geochemistry suggests that the parental magma of both plutons formed from an I-type tonalitic source rock that underwent partial melting during the thermal disturbance that followed a lithospheric delamination event during the post-collisional stage of the East African Orogeny. The variations in major oxide and trace element contents among individual samples of the AHP and the RBP cannot be explained as a liquid line of descent due to fractional crystallization; rather we interpret them as sampling variable proportions of an evolved liquid and the solid crystals in equilibrium with that liquid. 
    more » « less
  7. Experiments on shock amorphization of plagioclase in Mars-like basalt reconcile the pressure scale for martian meteorites. 
    more » « less
  8. Loveringite, a rare member of the crichtonite group with nominal formula (Ca,Ce)(Ti,Fe,Cr,Mg)21O38, was found in the Khamal layered mafic intrusion, the first known locality for this mineral in the Arabian Shield. The Khamal intrusion, a large post-collisional mafic complex, is lithologically zoned, bottom to top, from olivine gabbro through gabbronorite, hornblende gabbro, anorthosite, and diorite to quartz diorite. Loveringite is found near the base of the complex, as an intercumulus phase in olivine gabbro. Most loveringite grains are homogeneous, although a few grains are zoned from cores rich in TiO2, Al2O3, Cr2O3, and CaO towards rims rich in FeO*, ZrO2, V2O3, Y2O3, and rare earth elements (REE). Petrographic relations indicate that loveringite formed after crystallization of cumulus olivine, pyroxenes, and plagioclase. Anhedral and corroded crystals of loveringite are surrounded by reaction rims of Mn-bearing ilmenite and baddeleyite, suggesting that the residual liquid evolved into and subsequently out of the stability field of loveringite. The budget of incompatible elements (Zr, Hf, REE, U, and Th) hosted in loveringite is anomalous for a primitive mafic liquid. Saturation in loveringite is likely the result of early contamination of the primary melt by anatexis of country rock, followed by isolation of evolving liquid in intercumulus space that restricted communication with the overlying magma chamber. The zoned crystals likely reflect diffusive equilibration between residual loveringite grains and their reaction rims of ilmenite. 
    more » « less