4.8 Article

Layered subsurface in Utopia Basin of Mars revealed by Zhurong rover radar

Journal

NATURE
Volume 610, Issue 7931, Pages 308-+

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-022-05147-5

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Institute of Geology and Geophysics, Chinese Academy of Sciences [IGGCAS-202102]
  2. Key Research Programme of the Chinese Academy of Sciences [ZDBS-SSW-TLC001]
  3. National Natural Science Foundation of China [42288201, 41941002]

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Exploring the subsurface of Utopia Planitia on Mars through the Zhurong rover's ground-penetrating radar survey has provided detailed images showing a multi-layered structure, suggesting episodic hydraulic flooding sedimentation that filled the basin. While no direct evidence of liquid water was found, the presence of saline ice in the subsurface cannot be ruled out.
Exploring the subsurface structure and stratification of Mars advances our understanding of Martian geology, hydrological evolution and palaeoclimatic changes, and has been a main task for past and continuing Mars exploration missions(1-)(10). Utopia Planitia, the smooth plains of volcanic and sedimentary strata that infilled the Utopia impact crater, has been a prime target for such exploration as it is inferred to have hosted an ancient ocean on Mars(11-13). However, 45 years have passed since Viking-2 provided ground-based detection results. Here we report an in situ ground-penetrating radar survey of Martian subsurface structure in a southern marginal area of Utopia Planitia conducted by the Zhurong rover of the Tianwen-1 mission. A detailed subsurface image profile is constructed along the roughly 1,171 m traverse of the rover, showing an approximately 70-m-thick, multi-layered structure below a less than 10-m-thick regolith. Although alternative models deserve further scrutiny, the new radar image suggests the occurrence of episodic hydraulic flooding sedimentation that is interpreted to represent the basin infilling of Utopia Planitia during the Late Hesperian to Amazonian. While no direct evidence for the existence of liquid water was found within the radar detection depth range, we cannot rule out the presence of saline ice in the subsurface of the landing area.

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