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Dive into the research topics where G. Jeffrey Taylor is active.

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Featured researches published by G. Jeffrey Taylor.


Icarus | 1987

Original structures, and fragmentation and reassembly histories of asteroids - Evidence from meteorites

G. Jeffrey Taylor; Peter Maggiore; Edward R. D. Scott; Alan E. Rubin; Klaus Keil

Abstract If chondritic meteorites were internally heated after accretion had ended, then the hottest material would have been buried the deepest and should have cooled the slowest. If this is correct, there ought to be a correlation between cooling rate and petrographic type, a measure of the extent to which chondrites were metamorphosed (i.e., heated). Published and new cooling rates derived from the compositions of metallic iron-nickel grains do not display this correlation, implying either that chondrite parent asteroids never had onion-shell structures or that bodies with onion-shell structures were broken up and reassembled prior to cooling to below 500°C, the temperature at which cooling-rate information is recorded in metallic iron-nickel. Chondritic regolith breccias formed from materials that resided on the surfaces of their parent asteroids. Metallic iron-nickel grains in H- and L-chondrite regolith breccias indicate that the breccia constituents cooled at rates ranging from 1 to > 1000°K/myr. Based on thermal calculations, these cooling rates suggest that the materials spread out on the surfaces of H- and L-chondrite parent asteroids originated at depths ranging from about one kilometer to several tens of kilometers. Craters deep enough to excavate tens of kilometers cannot form on typical asteroidal bodies only 100 to 300 km in diameter without disrupting them. Therefore, it appears that at least some asteroids, namely, the parent bodies of H and L chondrites, were disrupted after cooling to below 300°C, and then reassembled to create surfaces containing rocks that originated at a wide range of depths. These results support theoretical calculations suggesting that many asteroids were broken up and subsequently reassembled into gravitationally bound rubble piles.


Archive | 1981

Three CO3 Chondrites from Antarctica-Comparison of Carbonaceous and Ordinary Type 3 Chondrites

E. R. D. Scott; G. Jeffrey Taylor; P. Maggiore; Klaus Keil; S. G. McKinley; Harry Y. McSween


Archive | 1978

Composition and Recrystallization of the Matrix of Unequilibrated (Type 3) Ordinary Chondrites

Gary R. Huss; Klaus Keil; G. Jeffrey Taylor


Archive | 2005

Preliminary Analysis of Nakhlite MIL 03346, with a Focus on Secondary Alteration

Julie D. Stopar; S. J. Lawrence; Rachel C. F. Lentz; G. Jeffrey Taylor


Archive | 1983

Type 3 Ordinary Chondrites - Metamorphism, Brecciation and Parent Bodies

Edward R. D. Scott; G. Jeffrey Taylor; Klaus Keil


Archive | 1982

Silicate Matrix Material in Type 3 Ordinary Chondrites: Implications for the Origin of Chondrules

Alan E. Rubin; E. R. D. Scott; G. Jeffrey Taylor; Klaus Keil


Archive | 1982

Origin of chondrules by preaccretionary melting of silicate matrix material

E. R. D. Scott; G. Jeffrey Taylor; Alan E. Rubin; Klaus Keil; Alfred Kracher


Archive | 1986

Histories of Ordinary Chondrite Parent Bodies: Clues from Regolith Breccias

Clarence Williams; E. R. D. Scott; G. Jeffrey Taylor; Klaus Keil; L. Schultz; Rainer Wieler


Archive | 1984

A Quantitative Look at Chondrite Metamorphism

G. Jeffrey Taylor; Edward R. D. Scott


Archive | 2005

Multiple Nakhlite Lava Flows

Rachel C. F. Lentz; Timothy J. McCoy; G. Jeffrey Taylor

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Klaus Keil

University of Hawaii at Manoa

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E. R. D. Scott

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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Edward R. D. Scott

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Alan E. Rubin

University of California

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Marc D. Norman

Australian National University

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M.-S. Ma

Oregon State University

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Gary R. Huss

Arizona State University

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