Nature and origin of the hematite-bearing plains of Terra Meridiani based on analyses of orbital and Mars Exploration rover data sets
نویسندگان
چکیده
[1] The !5 km of traverses and observations completed by the Opportunity rover from Endurance crater to the Fruitbasket outcrop show that the Meridiani plains consist of sulfate-rich sedimentary rocks that are largely covered by poorly-sorted basaltic aeolian sands and a lag of granule-sized hematitic concretions. Orbital reflectance spectra obtained by Mars Express OMEGA over this region are dominated by pyroxene, plagioclase feldspar, crystalline hematite (i.e., concretions), and nano-phase iron oxide dust signatures, consistent with Pancam and Mini-TES observations. Mössbauer Spectrometer observations indicate more olivine than observed with the other instruments, consistent with preferential optical obscuration of olivine features in mixtures with pyroxene and dust. Orbital data covering bright plains located several kilometers to the south of the landing site expose a smaller areal abundance of hematite, more dust, and a larger areal extent of outcrop compared to plains proximal to the landing site. Low-albedo, low-thermal-inertia, windswept plains located several hundred kilometers to the south of the landing site are predicted from OMEGA data to have more hematite and fine-grained olivine grains exposed as compared to the landing site. Low calcium pyroxene dominates spectral signatures from the cratered highlands to the south of Opportunity. A regional-scale model is presented for the formation of the plains explored by Opportunity, based on a rising ground water table late in the Noachian Era that trapped and altered local materials and aeolian basaltic sands. Cessation of this aqueous process led to dominance of aeolian processes and formation of the current configuration of the plains.
منابع مشابه
Multivariate approach for evaluating the composition of Meridiani spherules
One of the reasons for selecting Meridiani Planum as one of the two landing sites for the MER (Mars Exploration Rover) mission was the detection of a hematite signature by the TES (Thermal Emission Spectrometer) instrument onboard MGS (Mars Global surveyor) [1]. The presence of hematite at Meridiani has since been confirmed by instruments of the Athena Science Payload of the Opportunity MER rov...
متن کاملVisible and near-infrared multispectral analysis of rocks at Meridiani Planum, Mars, by the Mars Exploration Rover Opportunity
[1] Multispectral measurements in the visible and near infrared of rocks at Meridiani Planum by the Mars Exploration Rover Opportunity’s Pancam are described. The Pancam multispectral data show that the outcrops of the Burns formation consist of two main spectral units which in stretched 673, 535, 432 nm color composites appear buffand purple-colored. These units are referred to as the HFS and ...
متن کاملCompositional Constraints on Hematite-rich Spherule (blueberry) Formation at Meridiani Planum, Mars
Introduction: Meridiani Planum was chosen as the landing site for the Mars Exploration Rover Opportunity partially based on Mars Global Surveyor Thermal Emission Spectrometer data indicating an abundance of hematite [1]. Hematite often forms through processes that involve water, so the site was a promising one to determine whether conditions on Mars were ever suitable for life [1,2]. Opportunit...
متن کاملErosion rates at the Mars Exploration Rover landing sites and long-term climate change on Mars
[1] Erosion rates derived from the Gusev cratered plains and the erosion of weak sulfates by saltating sand at Meridiani Planum are so slow that they argue that the present dry and desiccating environment has persisted since the Early Hesperian. In contrast, sedimentary rocks at Meridiani formed in the presence of groundwater and occasional surface water, and many Columbia Hills rocks at Gusev ...
متن کاملCoordinated Analysis of Orbital and Ground Remote Sensing Data along the Opportunity Rover Traverse from Endurance to Erebus Crater
Introduction: Observations made by the Opportunity rover during its traverse south from Eagle crater show that the hematite bearing plains are an aeolian lag deposit consisting of hematite spherules and basal-tic sand, along with a nanophase iron oxide bearing dust component, that has been worked into ripples [1,2,3]. The hematite spherules, which have weathered out of the sulfate rich outcrop ...
متن کامل