The Watson iron meteorite (93kg) was found in 1972 in the Nullarbor Plain, near Watson, South Australia (30° 30` S, 131° 33` E). It was first cut in 1990. The second slice (19 x 24 cm) revealed a large mass of silicate rock (achondritic stone) embedded in the metal, an estimated 30 cm³ and 110 grams in the slab. The total size of the mass is substantially larger. This is part of the largest single silicate mass known within an iron meteorite.
Title: Watson: A new link in the IIE iron chain Authors: Olsen, E.; Davis, A.; Clarke, R. S.; Schultz, L.; Weber, H. W.; Clayton, R.; Mayeda, T.; Jarosewich, E.; Sylvester, P.; Grossman, L.; Wang, M.-S.; Lipschutz, M. E.; Steele, I. M.; Schwade, J.
Watson, which was found in 1972 in South Australia, contains the largest single silicate rock mass seen in any known iron meteorite. A comprehensive study has been completed on this unusual meteorite: petrography, metallography, analyses of the silicate inclusion (whole rock chemical analysis, INAA, RNAA, noble gases, and oxygen isotope analysis) and mineral compositions (by electron microprobe and ion microprobe). The whole rock has a composition of an H-chondrite minus the normal H-group metal and troilite content. The oxygen isotope composition is that of the silicates in the IIE iron meteorites and lies along an oxygen isotope fractionation line with the H-group chondrites. Trace elements in the metal confirm Watson is a new IIE iron. Whole rock Watson silicate shows an enrichment in K and P (each approximately 2X H-chondrites). The silicate inclusion has a highly equilibrated igneous (peridotite-like) texture with olivine largely poikilitic within low-Ca pyroxene: olivine (Fa20), opx (Fs17Wo3), capx (Fs9Wo14)(with very fine exsolution lamellae), antiperthite feldspar (An1-3Or5) with less than 1 micron exsolution lamellae (An1-3Or greater than 40), shocked feldspar with altered stoichiometry, minor whitlockite (also a poorly characterized interstitial phosphate-rich phase) and chromite, and only traces of metal and troilite. The individual silicate minerals have normal chondritic REE patterns, but whitlockite has a remarkable REE pattern. It is very enriched in light REE (La is 720X C1, and Lu is 90X C1, as opposed to usual chondritic values of approximately 300X and 100-150X, respectively) with a negative Eu anomaly. The enrichment of whole rock K is expressed both in an unusually high mean modal Or content of the feldspar, Or13, and in the presence of antiperthite.