Habitable Martian Environments Could Be Deep Beneath Planet's Surface
A new discovery of hydrothermally altered carbonate-bearing rocks on Mars points toward habitable environments deep in the martian crust, a Planetary Science Institute researcher said.
A deposit of carbonate rocks that once existed 6 km (about 4 miles)
below the surface of Mars was uplifted and exposed by an ancient meteor
impact, said Joseph Michalski, research scientist with PSI. The
carbonate minerals exist along with hydrated silicate minerals of a
likely hydrothermal origin.
Using data returned from NASA’s Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO)
spacecraft, researchers have spotted this unique mineralogy within the
central peak of a crater to the southwest of a giant martian volcanic
province named Syrtis Major. With infrared spectra from the Compact
Reconnaissance Imaging Spectrometer for Mars (CRISM), planetary
geologists detected the hydrothermal minerals from their spectroscopic
fingerprints.
Visible images from the High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment
(HiRISE) camera aboard MRO show that the carbonates and hydrated
silicate minerals occur within deformed bedrock that was exhumed by an
ancient meteor impact that poked through the volcanic upper crust of
Mars.
“Carbonate rocks have long been a Holy Grail of Mars exploration
for several reasons,” Michalski said. “One reason is
because carbonates form with the ocean and within lakes on Earth, so
the same could be true for ancient Mars -- such deposits could indicate
past seas that were once present on Mars. Another reason is because we
suspect that the ancient martian atmosphere was probably denser and CO2-rich, but today the atmosphere is quite thin so we infer that the CO2 must have gone into carbonate rocks somewhere on Mars.”
Michalski and co-author Paul B. Niles of NASA Johnson Space Center
recently published the results in a paper titled “Deep crustal
carbonate rocks exposed by meteor impact on Mars” in Nature Geoscience.
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The research team used data from the HiRise instrument onboard NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech
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