Aqueous Alteration of the Askival Feldspathic Cumulate Sample in Gale Crater
Askival is a light-toned, coarsely crystalline float rock, which was identified near the base of Vera Rubin Ridge in Gale crater. We have studied Askival, principally with the ChemCam instrument but also using APXS compositional data and MAHLI images. Askival and an earlier identified sample, Bindi, represent two rare examples of feldspathic cumulate float rocks in Gale crater with >65% relict plagioclase. Bindi appears unaltered whereas Askival shows textural and compositional signatures of silicification, along with alkali remobilization and hydration. Askival likely experienced multiple stages of alteration, occurring first through acidic hydrolysis of metal cations, followed by deposition of silica and possible phyllosilicates at low T and neutral-alkaline pH. Through laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy compositional analyses and normative calculations, we suggest that an assemblage of Fe-Mg silicates including amphibole and pyroxene, Fe phases, and possibly Mg-rich phyllosilicate are present. Thermodynamic modeling of the more pristine Bindi composition predicts that amphibole and feldspar are stable within an upper crustal setting. This is consistent with the presence of amphibole in the parent igneous rocks of Askival and suggests that the paucity of amphiboles in other known Martian samples reflects the lack of representative samples of the Martian crust rather than their absence on Mars.
Funding
UKSA
STFC
Expanding Excellence in England (E3)
NNH15A35I
NNH13ZDA018O
USRA
History
Citation
Bowden, D.L., Bridges, J.C., Cousin, A., Rapin, W., Semprich, J., Gasnault, O., Forni, O., Gasda, P., Das, D., Payré, V., Sautter, V., Bedford, C.C., Wiens, R.C., Pinet, P. and Frydenvang, J. (2023), Askival: An altered feldspathic cumulate sample in Gale crater. Meteorit Planet Sci, 58: 41-62. https://doi.org/10.1111/maps.13933Version
- VoR (Version of Record)
Published in
METEORITICS & PLANETARY SCIENCEVolume
57Pagination
(1)Publisher
WILEYissn
1086-9379eissn
1945-5100Acceptance date
2022-10-28Copyright date
2022Available date
2024-06-20Publisher DOI
Language
enPublisher version
Data Access Statement
Mars Science Laboratory ChemCam, APXS, MastCam and MAHLI data that support this study are openly available from the NASA Planetary Data System: https://pds-geosciences.wustl.edu/missions/msl/. Relevant ChemCam derived geochemical data products from this repository are provided in Tables 1 and 3. Relevant APXS derived geochemical data products from this repository are provided in Table 2.Rights Retention Statement
- No