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I don't really understand why an element has a mass number, I thought that an element has several isotopes, each with a different mass. Is my understanding correct:

The mass number of an element is the mass number of the majority isotope.

Would appreciate anyone willing to clear this out for me. Thanks!

12345bird
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The matter on earth has been mixed rather thoroughly through time, expecially in the beginning 4.5 billion years ago. That means that all elements have a rather (some more, some less) constant isotopic mixture across the earth crust, and so you can assign an atomic weight also to each nonmonoisotopic element.

Exceptions prove the rule, like C-14, deuterium, etc. The iridium that came on earth with the impact that killed the dinosaurs has a distictly different composition than all other iridium deposits on earth, as does chromium from the same sediments.

Of course on mars, the numbers would be slightly different.

Karl
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    In the first paragraph "rather" is the keyword. The isotopic variation is why atomic masses for many elements have limited precision. // Don't ever remember that "The iridium that came on earth with the impact that killed the dinosaurs has a distinctly different composition than all other iridium deposits on earth..." To my knowledge iridium was a marker because it occurred in higher concentrations in particular geological layers. // Atomic weights are known to much better precision than the weighted mass numbers (where weight is isotopic abundance). – MaxW Apr 19 '20 at 21:30
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    Atomic weights might be different on Mars because of isotopic variation, but the mass number of an isotope wouldn't vary. – MaxW Apr 19 '20 at 21:30
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    @MaxW There is a singular iridium concentration in sediments from that time, and it has a different isotopic composition, which more or less proves that it is extraterrestic. – Karl Apr 20 '20 at 05:07
  • Super Fantastic!!! Learned something new. I poked around a bit and you are right the unearthly isotopic composition was one of the pieces of evidence for the Alvarez hypothesis. – MaxW Apr 20 '20 at 05:24