4.5 Article

Rolling Ironstones from Earth and Mars: Terrestrial Hydrothermal Ooids as a Potential Analogue of Martian Spherules

Journal

MINERALS
Volume 11, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/min11050460

Keywords

Blueberry; iron grains; hydrothermal system; haematite; goethite; Mars; Panarea

Funding

  1. European Multidisciplinary Seafloor and water-column Observatory European Research Infrastructure Consortium project (EMSO ERIC)
  2. Osservatorio della Biodiversita della Regione Siciliana project (ORBS) [1017]

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High-resolution images from NASA rovers on Mars revealed mm-size loose haematite spherulitic deposits, similar to terrestrial iron-ooids. The formation of these Martian spherules shares similarities with iron spherules currently forming on Earth near active submarine hydrothermal systems. The recent discovery of a still working iron-ooid source on Earth indicates past hydrothermal activity on Mars could potentially be the cause of formation of these enigmatic iron grains.
High-resolution images of Mars from National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) rovers revealed mm-size loose haematite spherulitic deposits (nicknamed blueberries) similar to terrestrial iron-ooids, for which both abiotic and biotic genetic hypotheses have been proposed. Understanding the formation mechanism of these haematite spherules can thus improve our knowledge on the possible geologic evolution and links to life development on Mars. Here, we show that shape, size, fabric and mineralogical composition of the Martian spherules share similarities with corresponding iron spherules currently forming on the Earth over an active submarine hydrothermal system located off Panarea Island (Aeolian Islands, Mediterranean Sea). Hydrothermal fluids associated with volcanic activity enable these terrestrial spheroidal grains to form and grow. The recent exceptional discovery of a still working iron-ooid source on the Earth provides indications that past hydrothermal activity on the Red Planet is a possible scenario to be considered as the cause of formation of these enigmatic iron grains.

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