4.5 Article

Source-to-Sink Terrestrial Analogs for the Paleoenvironment of Gale Crater, Mars

Journal

JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-PLANETS
Volume 126, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1029/2020JE006530

Keywords

basaltic weathering; Mars paleoclimate; terrestrial analogs

Funding

  1. NASA Postdoctoral Program Fellowship
  2. NASA Solar System Workings program [NNX16AR38G]
  3. David E. King Fieldwork award from the Department of Geosciences at Stony Brook University
  4. NASA [NNX16AR38G, 894566] Funding Source: Federal RePORTER

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The study compiles basaltic geological data from various climates on Earth to provide a reference framework for the climate conditions that may have existed during the formation of sedimentary layers in Gale crater, revealing the influence of climate on secondary mineral assemblages in Martian mudstones.
In the Late Noachian to Early Hesperian period, rivers transported detritus from igneous source terrains to a downstream lake within Gale crater, creating a stratified stack of fluviolacustrine rocks that is currently exposed along the slopes of Mount Sharp. Controversy exists regarding the paleoclimate that supported overland flow of liquid water at Gale crater, in large part because little is known about how chemical and mineralogical paleoclimate indicators from mafic-rock dominated source-to-sink systems are translated into the rock record. Here, we compile data from basaltic terrains with varying climates on Earth in order to provide a reference frame for the conditions that may have prevailed during the formation of the sedimentary strata in Gale crater, particularly focusing on the Sheepbed and Pahrump Hills members. We calculate the chemical index of alteration for weathering profiles and fluvial sediments to better constrain the relationship between climate and chemical weathering in mafic terrains, a method that best estimates the cooler limit of climate conditions averaged over time. We also compare X-ray diffraction patterns and mineral abundances from fluvial sediments in varying terrestrial climates and martian mudstones to better understand the influence of climate on secondary mineral assemblages in basaltic terrains. We show that the geochemistry and mineralogy of most of the fine-grained sedimentary rocks in Gale crater display first-order similarities with sediments generated in climates that resemble those of present-day Iceland, while other parts of the stratigraphy indicate even colder baseline climate conditions. None of the lithologies examined at Gale crater resemble fluvial sediments or weathering profiles from warm (temperate to tropical) terrestrial climates.

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