4.4 Article

Fatty Acid Preservation in Modern and Relict Hot-Spring Deposits in Iceland, with Implications for Organics Detection on Mars

期刊

ASTROBIOLOGY
卷 21, 期 1, 页码 60-82

出版社

MARY ANN LIEBERT, INC
DOI: 10.1089/ast.2019.2115

关键词

Hot springs; Sinter; Fatty acids; TMAH; SAM instrument

资金

  1. NASA Planetary Science and Technology through Analog Research (PSTAR) program [NNX15AJ38G]
  2. American Philosophical Society's Lewis and Clark Fund for Exploration and Field Research in Astrobiology
  3. NASA [NNX17AJ68G]
  4. Georgetown University Pilot Research Grant

向作者/读者索取更多资源

This study explores the preservation potential of fatty acids in hydrothermal spring deposits on Earth, with implications for the detection of organics in Martian hot-spring deposits. Results suggest that fatty acids can be preserved and detected with the TMAH pyrolysis-GC-MS method, providing insights into potential organic detection on Mars. Rovers equipped with thermochemolysis pyrolysis-GC-MS instrumentation may be essential for detecting relatively young organics on Mars, highlighting the importance of careful landing site and sample selection processes.
Hydrothermal spring deposits host unique microbial ecosystems and have the capacity to preserve microbial communities as biosignatures within siliceous sinter layers. This quality makes terrestrial hot springs appealing natural laboratories to study the preservation of both organic and morphologic biosignatures. The discovery of hydrothermal deposits on Mars has called attention to these hot springs as Mars-analog environments, driving forward the study of biosignature preservation in these settings to help prepare future missions targeting the recovery of biosignatures from martian hot-spring deposits. This study quantifies the fatty acid load in three Icelandic hot-spring deposits ranging from modern and inactive to relict. Samples were collected from both the surface and 2-18 cm in depth to approximate the drilling capabilities of current and upcoming Mars rovers. To determine the preservation potential of organics in siliceous sinter deposits, fatty acid analyses were performed with pyrolysis-gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS) utilizing thermochemolysis with tetramethylammonium hydroxide (TMAH). This technique is available on both current and upcoming Mars rovers. Results reveal that fatty acids are often degraded in the subsurface relative to surface samples but are preserved and detectable with the TMAH pyrolysis-GC-MS method. Hot-spring mid-to-distal aprons are often the best texturally and geomorphically definable feature in older, degraded terrestrial sinter systems and are therefore most readily detectable on Mars from orbital images. These findings have implications for the detection of organics in martian hydrothermal systems as they suggest that organics might be detectable on Mars in relatively recent hot-spring deposits, but preservation likely deteriorates over geological timescales. Rovers with thermochemolysis pyrolysis-GC-MS instrumentation may be able to detect fatty acids in hot-spring deposits if the organics are relatively young; therefore, martian landing site and sample selection are of paramount importance in the search for organics on Mars.

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