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Mars Science Laboratory CheMin Data From the Glen Torridon Region and the Significance of Lake-Groundwater Interactions in Interpreting Mineralogy and Sedimentary History

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posted on 2024-07-10, 11:55 authored by Michael T Thorpe, Thomas F Bristow, Elizabeth B Rampe, Nicholas J Tosca, JP Grotzinger, KA Bennett, CN Achilles, DF Blake, SJ Chipera, G Downs, RT Downs, SM Morrison, V Tu, N Castle, P Craig, DJ Des Marais, RM Hazen, DW Ming, R Morris, AH Treiman, DT Vaniman, AS Yen, AR Vasavada, E Dehouck, JC Bridges, J Berger, A McAdam, T Peretyazhko, KL Siebach, AB Bryk, VK Fox, CM Fedo
The Glen Torridon (GT) region in Gale crater, Mars is a region with strong clay mineral signatures inferred from orbital spectroscopy. The CheMin X-ray diffraction (XRD) instrument onboard the Mars Science Laboratory rover, Curiosity, measured some of the highest clay mineral abundances to date within GT, complementing the orbital detections. GT may also be unique because in the XRD patterns of some samples, CheMin identified new phases, including: (a) Fe-carbonates, and (b) a phase with a novel peak at 9.2 Å. Fe-carbonates have been previously suggested from other instruments onboard, but this is the first definitive reporting by CheMin of Fe-carbonate. This new phase with a 9.2 Å reflection has never been observed in Gale crater and may be a new mineral for Mars, but discrete identification still remains enigmatic because no single phase on Earth is able to account for all of the GT mineralogical, geochemical, and sedimentological constraints. Here, we modeled XRD profiles and propose an interstratified clay mineral, specifically greenalite-minnesotaite, as a reasonable candidate. The coexistence of Fe-carbonate and Fe-rich clay minerals in the GT samples supports a conceptual model of a lacustrine groundwater mixing environment. Groundwater interaction with percolating lake waters in the sediments is common in terrestrial lacustrine settings, and the diffusion of two distinct water bodies within the subsurface can create a geochemical gradient and unique mineral front in the sediments. Ultimately, the proximity to this mixing zone may have controlled the secondary minerals preserved in sedimentary rocks exposed in GT.

History

Citation

Thorpe, M. T., Bristow, T. F., Rampe, E. B., Tosca, N. J., Grotzinger, J. P., Bennett, K. A., et al. (2022). Mars Science Laboratory CheMin data from the Glen Torridon region and the significance of lake-groundwater interactions in interpreting mineralogy and sedimentary history. Journal of Geophysical Research: Planets, 127, e2021JE007099. https://doi.org/10.1029/2021JE007099

Published in

JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-PLANETS

Volume

127

Issue

11

Pagination

(33)

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION

issn

2169-9097

eissn

2169-9100

Available date

2024-07-10

Language

English

Data Access Statement

All Mars Science Laboratory Curiosity data products and data sets, including CheMin data, Mars images, and APXS data are archived at the NASA Planetary Data Systems and are available at https://pds-geosciences.wustl.edu/missions/msl/ (Gellert, 2013; Vaniman, 2013). APXS data used in this study specifically can be accessed through O’Connell-Cooper et al. (2022). CheMin XRD data presented in this paper is also archived the CheMin Open Data Repository (ODR; at https://odr.io/CheMin). The geochemical mixing model for this work is also archived on a FAIR repository and can be accessed at M. Thorpe et al. (2022).

Rights Retention Statement

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