4.5 Article

Geologic history of Martian regolith breccia Northwest Africa 7034: Evidence for hydrothermal activity and lithologic diversity in the Martian crust

Journal

JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-PLANETS
Volume 121, Issue 10, Pages 2120-2149

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1002/2016JE005143

Keywords

apatite; zircon; clast; Mars; sedimentary; transport

Funding

  1. NASA Mars Fundamental Research Program [NNX13AK44G]
  2. NASA Early Career Fellowship [NNX13AG40G]
  3. NASA Cosmochemistry Program [NNX13AH85G, NNX14AI23G]
  4. Hungarian NKFIH [119245]
  5. Imre Koranyi Fellowship
  6. UK Science and Technology Facilities Council [ST/I001298/1]
  7. NSERC
  8. NASA [473902, NNX13AH85G, 470797, NNX13AK44G, 681128, NNX14AI23G] Funding Source: Federal RePORTER
  9. STFC [ST/L000776/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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The timing and mode of deposition for Martian regolith breccia Northwest Africa (NWA) 7034 were determined by combining petrography, shape analysis, and thermochronology. NWA 7034 is composed of igneous, impact, and brecciated clasts within a thermally annealed submicron matrix of pulverized crustal rocks and devitrified impact/volcanic glass. The brecciated clasts are likely lithified portions of Martian regolith with some evidence of past hydrothermal activity. Represented lithologies are primarily ancient crustal materials with crystallization ages as old as 4.4Ga. One ancient zircon was hosted by an alkali-rich basalt clast, confirming that alkalic volcanism occurred on Mars very early. NWA 7034 is composed of fragmented particles that do not exhibit evidence of having undergone bed load transport by wind or water. The clast size distribution is similar to terrestrial pyroclastic deposits. We infer that the clasts were deposited by atmospheric rainout subsequent to a pyroclastic eruption(s) and/or impact event(s), although the ancient ages of igneous components favor mobilization by impact(s). Despite ancient components, the breccia has undergone a single pervasive thermal event at 500-800 degrees C, evident by groundmass texture and concordance of similar to 1.5Ga dates for bulk rock K-Ar, U-Pb in apatite, and U-Pb in metamict zircons. The 1.5Ga age is likely a thermal event that coincides with rainout/breccia lithification. We infer that the episodic process of regolith lithification dominated sedimentary processes during the Amazonian Epoch. The absence of pre-Amazonian high-temperature metamorphic events recorded in ancient zircons indicates source domains of static southern highland crust punctuated by episodic impact modification.

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