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Featured researches published by N. A. Starkey.


American Mineralogist | 2016

Nickel–cobalt contents of olivine record origins of mantle peridotite and related rocks

Claude Herzberg; Christopher Vidito; N. A. Starkey

Abstract Olivine is distinguished from all other minerals in providing a remarkable chemical narrative about magmatic processes that occurred in Earth’s crust, mantle, and core over the entire age of Earth history. Olivines in mantle peridotite have Ni contents and Mg numbers that were largely produced by equilibrium crystallization in an early turbulently convecting magma ocean; subsequent stages of partial melting operated to slightly elevate Ni and Mg number in residual olivines. Olivines from Archean komatiites from the Abitibi greenstone belt have Ni contents and Mg numbers that are consistent with an extensively melted peridotite source at great depths in the mantle. Olivines from basaltic oceanic crust, the Icelandic mantle plume and other Phanerozoic occurrences have compositions that record magma chamber crystallization, recharge, mixing, and partial melting. Olivines from the present-day Icelandic mantle plume have compositions that are consistent the melting of a peridotite source; unlike Hawaii, the melting of recycled crust as a distinct pyroxenite lithology is not evident in the olivine chemistry of Iceland. Paleocene picrites from Baffin Island and West Greenland from the ancient Icelandic plume have olivines with Ni contents that are consistent with either Ni-rich peridotite that formed by core-mantle interaction or by low-pressure crystallization of hot and deep magmas. In general, hot magma oceans, mantle plumes, and ambient mantle magmatism form in ways that are captured by the compositions of the olivine crystals that they contain.


Science Advances | 2018

Oxygen isotopic evidence for accretion of Earth’s water before a high-energy Moon-forming giant impact

R. C. Greenwood; Jean-Alix Barrat; Martin F. Miller; M. Anand; Nicolas Dauphas; Ian A. Franchi; Patrick Sillard; N. A. Starkey

We show that the bulk of Earth’s water was delivered before the high-energy collision that led to the formation of the Moon. The Earth-Moon system likely formed as a result of a collision between two large planetary objects. Debate about their relative masses, the impact energy involved, and the extent of isotopic homogenization continues. We present the results of a high-precision oxygen isotope study of an extensive suite of lunar and terrestrial samples. We demonstrate that lunar rocks and terrestrial basalts show a 3 to 4 ppm (parts per million), statistically resolvable, difference in Δ17O. Taking aubrite meteorites as a candidate impactor material, we show that the giant impact scenario involved nearly complete mixing between the target and impactor. Alternatively, the degree of similarity between the Δ17O values of the impactor and the proto-Earth must have been significantly closer than that between Earth and aubrites. If the Earth-Moon system evolved from an initially highly vaporized and isotopically homogenized state, as indicated by recent dynamical models, then the terrestrial basalt-lunar oxygen isotope difference detected by our study may be a reflection of post–giant impact additions to Earth. On the basis of this assumption, our data indicate that post–giant impact additions to Earth could have contributed between 5 and 30% of Earth’s water, depending on global water estimates. Consequently, our data indicate that the bulk of Earth’s water was accreted before the giant impact and not later, as often proposed.


Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta | 2013

The abundance, distribution, and isotopic composition of Hydrogen in the Moon as revealed by basaltic lunar samples: Implications for the volatile inventory of the Moon

Romain Tartèse; M. Anand; Jessica J. Barnes; N. A. Starkey; Ian A. Franchi; Yuji Sano


Earth and Planetary Science Letters | 2014

The origin of water in the primitive Moon as revealed by the lunar highlands samples

Jessica J. Barnes; Romain Tartèse; M. Anand; Francis M. McCubbin; Ian A. Franchi; N. A. Starkey; Sara S. Russell


Chemical Geology | 2013

Accurate and precise measurements of the D/H ratio and hydroxyl content in lunar apatites using NanoSIMS

Jessica J. Barnes; Ian A. Franchi; M. Anand; Romain Tartèse; N. A. Starkey; M. Koike; Yuji Sano; Sara S. Russell


Earth and Planetary Science Letters | 2012

Chondrule fragments from Comet Wild2: Evidence for high temperature processing in the outer Solar System

John C. Bridges; Hitesh Changela; Sergei Nayakshin; N. A. Starkey; Ian A. Franchi


Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta | 2013

The oxygen isotope evolution of parent body aqueous solutions as recorded by multiple carbonate generations in the Lonewolf Nunataks 94101 CM2 carbonaceous chondrite

Martin R. Lee; M. Sofe; Paula Lindgren; N. A. Starkey; Ian A. Franchi


Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta | 2013

Insight into the silicate and organic reservoirs of the comet forming region

N. A. Starkey; Ian A. Franchi


Meteoritics & Planetary Science | 2015

Igneous and shock processes affecting chassignite amphibole evaluated using chlorine/water partitioning and hydrogen isotopes

Paul A. Giesting; S. P. Schwenzer; Justin Filiberto; N. A. Starkey; Ian A. Franchi; A. H. Treiman; A. G. Tindle; Monica M. Grady


Earth and Planetary Science Letters | 2014

An oxygen isotope study of Wark–Lovering rims on type A CAIs in primitive carbonaceous chondrites

Jean-David Bodénan; N. A. Starkey; Sara S. Russell; I. P. Wright; Ian A. Franchi

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Sara S. Russell

American Museum of Natural History

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