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Esperance: Multiple episodes of aqueous alteration involving fracture fills and coatings at Matijevic Hill, Mars

Authors :
Douglas W. Ming
David W. Mittlefehldt
Steven W. Squyres
Bradley L. Jolliff
Albert S. Yen
Raymond E. Arvidson
Richard V. Morris
Benton C. Clark
William H. Farrand
Ralf Gellert
Kenneth E. Herkenhoff
Source :
American Mineralogist. 101:1515-1526
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
Mineralogical Society of America, 2016.

Abstract

In the search for evidence of past aqueous activity by the Mars Exploration Rover Opportunity, fracture-filling veins and rock coatings are prime candidates for exploration. At one location within a segment of remaining rim material surrounding Endeavour Crater, a set of “boxwork” fractures in an outcrop called Esperance are filled by a bright, hydrated, and highly siliceous (SiO2 ~ 66 wt%) material, which has overall a montmorillonite-like chemical composition. This material is partially covered by patches of a thin, dark coating that is sulfate-rich (SO3 ~ 21 wt%) but also contains significant levels of Si, Fe, Ca, and Mg. The simultaneous presence of abundant S, Si, and Fe indicates significant mineralogical complexity within the coating. This combination of vein and coating compositions is unlike previous analyses on Mars. Both materials are heterogeneously eroded, presumably by eolian abrasion. The evidence indicates at least two separate episodes of solute precipitation from aqueous fluids at this location, possibly widely separated in time. In addition to the implications for multiple episodes of alteration at the surface of the planet, aqueous chemical environments such as these would have been habitable at the time of their formation and are also favorable for preservation of organic material.

Details

ISSN :
0003004X
Volume :
101
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
American Mineralogist
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........7f1f00aad2a58202cf35d775b83d5bed