NASA’s OSIRIS-REx spacecraft delivered a sample from the carbonaceous asteroid (101955) Bennu to Earth on September 24, 2023. Since Bennu presumably accreted in the outer protoplanetary disk, beyond Jupiter’s orbit, the collected material is expected to be rich in highly volatile elements such as H, C, N, and noble gases—similar to Ivuna-type (CI) carbonaceous chondrites and material from asteroid (162173) Ryugu returned by JAXA’s Hayabusa2 spacecraft. This type of material may have contributed to the volatile inventory of Earth and the other terrestrial planets. Bulk CI chondrites record a narrow range of δ15N values (i.e., the permil difference from the atmospheric 15N/14N ratio), averaging between +42 and 49‰. In contrast, recent analyses at CRPG’s noble gas facility revealed that two pelletized Ryugu samples have lower δ15N values of +18.1 ± 0.9‰ and +19.5 ± 0.9‰. Together with the low measured N abundances, this observation suggests that Ryugu has lost a 15N-rich, labile organic phase due to pervasive aqueous alteration. Subsequent high-resolution step-heating analyses of an additional Ryugu particle demonstrated that the δ15N value varies significantly during successive extraction steps (between +1.0 ± 1.0‰ and 65.8 ± 1.1‰); the variable N isotopic composition points to the presence of several isotopically distinct N-carrier phases in CI-type material. Here, we report preliminary N-Ne-Ar results obtained for individual particles from an aggregate Bennu sample using the Noblesse-HR (Nu Instruments) noble gas mass spectrometer at CRPG’s noble gas facility. In a companion abstract, we will present the noble gas (He, Ne, Ar, Kr, Xe) characteristics of other aggregate particles determined with a HELIX MC Plus. Whereas the abundance and isotopic composition of noble gases permit detection of various presolar phases and the so-called phase Q, as well as quantification of solar wind–derived and cosmogenic components, the abundance and isotopic composition of N are expected to provide further insights into the origin and evolution of N-bearing phases in carbonaceous asteroids.