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Glen Torridon Mineralogy and the Sedimentary History of the Clay Mineral Bearing Unit

Authors :
Thorpe, M. T
Bristow, T. F
Rampe, E. B
Grotzinger, J. P
Fox, V. K
Bennett, K. A
Yen, A. S
Vasavada, A. R
Vaniman, D. T
Tu, V
Treiman, A. H
Morrison, S. M
Morris, R. V
Ming, D. W
McAdam, A. C
Malespin, C.A
Mahaffy, P. R
Hazen, R. M
Gupta, S
Downs, R. T
Downs, G. W
Marais, D. J. Des
Craig, P. I
Chipera, S. J
Castle, N
Blake, D. F
Achilles, C. N
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
United States: NASA Center for Aerospace Information (CASI), 2020.

Abstract

Clay minerals are common in ancient terrains on Mars and their presence at the surface alludes to aqueous processes in the Noachian to Early Hesperian (>3.5 Ga). Gale crater was selected as Curiosity’s landing site largely because of the identification of clay mineral rich strata from orbit. On Earth, the types of clay minerals (i.e., smectites) identified in Gale crater are typically juvenile weathering products that ultimately record the interaction between primary igneous minerals with the hydrosphere, atmosphere, and biosphere. Trioctahedral and dioctahedral smectite were identified by Curiosity in units stratigraphically below the Clay Mineral-Bearing Unit (CBU) identified from orbit. Compositional and sedimentological data suggest the smectite formed via authigenesis in a lake environment and may have been altered during early diagenesis. The CBU is stratigraphically equivalent to a hematite-rich unit to the north and stratigraphically underlies sulfate-rich units to the south, suggesting a dynamic environment and evolving history of water in the ancient Gale crater lake. Targeting these clay mineral rich areas on Mars with rover missions provides an opportunity to explore the aqueous and sedimentary history of the planet.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
NASA Technical Reports
Notes :
NNH15C048B, , NNJ13HA01C
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsnas.20200001779
Document Type :
Report