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Suevite breccia from the Ries crater, Germany: Origin, cooling history and devitrification of impact glasses

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Abstract— The distribution and petrography of surficial suevite breccias of the Ries impact crater in Southern Germany are reviewed, and the morphology, petrography and chemical composition of impact glasses in suevite breccias and their postdepositional devitrification is synthesized. Origin and thermal history of suevite breccia and suevite glasses are inferred from these data and from recent results of cooling and crystallization experiments with suevite glass melts under controlled conditions. In a montmorillonitic groundmass, the suevite breccia contains pieces of glass, up to some decimeters in size, and crystalline rock clasts of all stages of shock metamorphism. The glass particles originated in impact melt of basement gneisses and cooled by adiabatic pressure release from ∼80 GPa to atmospheric pressure during ejection from the crater. They were deposited on the ground together with the other suevite components at a temperature of ∼750 °C. Fractured glass pieces in the breccia show that during deposition of the suevite the temperature was below the temperature at which undercooled melt transforms to rigid glass. The suevite cooled after deposition mainly by convection of heat by emanating gases and vapors. In chilled layers at the base and at the top of suevite deposits, the glasses are preserved in vitreous state. Between these zones, the glasses were devitrified, yet crystallization of pyroxene, plagioclase and magnetite took place below the glass‐transformation temperature. Annealing experiments show that this unusual devitrification below the transformation temperature can be explained by the impact origin of suevite glasses. Due to rapid adiabatic cooling on decompression, the glasses were oversaturated with water and internally strained. Under these conditions, devitrification, especially the formation of plagioclase, was possible at temperatures below the transformation range. The origin from adiabatically cooled impact melt of deep‐seated rocks distinguishes water‐bearing suevite glasses from the Ries‐derived, water‐free moldavite tektites, which are interpreted as condensates of vaporized, surficial sediments (Engelhardt et al., 1987).
Title: Suevite breccia from the Ries crater, Germany: Origin, cooling history and devitrification of impact glasses
Description:
Abstract— The distribution and petrography of surficial suevite breccias of the Ries impact crater in Southern Germany are reviewed, and the morphology, petrography and chemical composition of impact glasses in suevite breccias and their postdepositional devitrification is synthesized.
Origin and thermal history of suevite breccia and suevite glasses are inferred from these data and from recent results of cooling and crystallization experiments with suevite glass melts under controlled conditions.
In a montmorillonitic groundmass, the suevite breccia contains pieces of glass, up to some decimeters in size, and crystalline rock clasts of all stages of shock metamorphism.
The glass particles originated in impact melt of basement gneisses and cooled by adiabatic pressure release from ∼80 GPa to atmospheric pressure during ejection from the crater.
They were deposited on the ground together with the other suevite components at a temperature of ∼750 °C.
Fractured glass pieces in the breccia show that during deposition of the suevite the temperature was below the temperature at which undercooled melt transforms to rigid glass.
The suevite cooled after deposition mainly by convection of heat by emanating gases and vapors.
In chilled layers at the base and at the top of suevite deposits, the glasses are preserved in vitreous state.
Between these zones, the glasses were devitrified, yet crystallization of pyroxene, plagioclase and magnetite took place below the glass‐transformation temperature.
Annealing experiments show that this unusual devitrification below the transformation temperature can be explained by the impact origin of suevite glasses.
Due to rapid adiabatic cooling on decompression, the glasses were oversaturated with water and internally strained.
Under these conditions, devitrification, especially the formation of plagioclase, was possible at temperatures below the transformation range.
The origin from adiabatically cooled impact melt of deep‐seated rocks distinguishes water‐bearing suevite glasses from the Ries‐derived, water‐free moldavite tektites, which are interpreted as condensates of vaporized, surficial sediments (Engelhardt et al.
, 1987).

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