Mineralogy, composition, and alteration of Mars Pathfinder rocks and soils: Evidence from multispectral, elemental, and magnetic data on terrestrial analogue, SNC meteorite, and Pathfinder samples

被引:278
作者
Morris, RV [1 ]
Golden, DC
Bell, JF
Shelfer, TD
Scheinost, AC
Hinman, NW
Furniss, G
Mertzman, SA
Bishop, JL
Ming, DW
Allen, CC
Britt, DT
机构
[1] NASA, Lyndon B Johnson Space Ctr, Houston, TX 77058 USA
[2] Lockheed Martin Space Operat Co, Houston, TX 77058 USA
[3] Cornell Univ, Dept Astron, Ithaca, NY USA
[4] Univ Delaware, Dept Plant & Soil Sci, Newark, DE 19717 USA
[5] Univ Montana, Dept Geol, Missoula, MT 59812 USA
[6] Franklin & Marshall Coll, Dept Geosci, Lancaster, PA 17604 USA
[7] NASA, Ames Res Ctr, Moffett Field, CA 94035 USA
[8] Univ Arizona, Lunar & Planetary Lab, Tucson, AZ 85721 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1029/1999JE001059
中图分类号
P3 [地球物理学]; P59 [地球化学];
学科分类号
0708 ; 070902 ;
摘要
Major element, multispectral, and magnetic progenies data were obtained at Ares Vallis during the Mars Pathfinder mission. To understand the compositional, mineralogical, and process implications of these data, we obtained major element, mineralogical, and magnetic data for well-crystalline and nanophase ferric minerals, terrestrial analogue samples with known geologic context, and SNC meteorites. Analogue samples include unaltered, palagonitic, and sulfatetic tephra from Mauna Kea Volcano (hydrolytic and acid-sulfate alteration), steam vent material from Kilauea Volcano (hydrolytic alteration), and impactites from Meteor Crater (relithification). Salient results for Mars Pathfinder include: (1) Band depths BD530b and BD600 and the reflectivity ratio R800/R750 are consistent with the dominant ferric mineral being nanophase ferric oxide associated with an unknown amount of H2O and occurring in composite particles along with subordinate amounts of other ferric minerals. Hematite and hematite plus nanophase goethite are most consistent with the data, but maghemite, akaganeite, schwertmannite, and nanophase lepidocrocite are also possible interpretations. Ferric oxides that are consistently not favored by the data as sole alteration products are jarosites and well-crystalline goethite and lepidocrocite. (2) The strength of the ferric adsorption edge (R750/R445) implies the Fe3+/Fe2+ values for Pathfinder rock and soil are within the ranges 0.7-3 and 3-20, respectively. (3) Ferrous silicates are indicated for subsets of Pathfinder rocks and soils. One subset has a band minimum near 930 nm that can attributed to low-Ca pyroxene. Alternatively, the band could be a second manifestation of certain ferric oxides, including nanophase goethite, maghemite, akaganeite, and schwertmannite. Another subset has a negative spectral slope from similar to 800 to 1005 nm which could result from the high-energy wing of a high-Ca pyroxene and/or olivine band, a mixture of bright and dark materials, and, for rocks, thin coatings of bright dust on dark rocks. (4) Chemical data on Pathfinder rocks and soils are consistent with two-component mixtures between an "andesitic" rock with low MgO and SO3 concentrations (soil-free rock) and a global, basaltic soil with high MgO and SO, concentrations (rock-free soil). Pathfinder rock-free soil can be modeled as a chemical mixture of SNC meteorites and the Pathfinder soil-free rock. (5) Pathfinder soil cannot be obtained by chemical alteration of Pathfinder rocks by any of the hydrolytic and acid-sulfate alteration processes we studied. Presumably, global mixing has obscured and possibly erased the elemental signatures of chemical alteration. (6) The strongly magnetic phase in palagonitic and sulfatetic tephra is titanomagnetite and possibly its oxidation product titanomaghemite (Fe-Ti spinels). The saturation magnetization of the tephra samples (0.5-2.0 Am-2/kg) is at or below the low end of the range inferred for Martian dust (4+/-2 Am-2/kg), implying that lithogenic Fe-Ti spinels are a possible candidate for the Martian strongly magnetic phase. (7) The predominantly palagonitic spectral signature and magnetic nature of Martian soil and dust are consistent with glassy precursors with imbedded Fe-Ti spinel particles. Comparison with lunar glass production rates suggests that production of sufficient quantities of glassy materials on Mars by volcanic and impact processes is sufficient to account for these observations.
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页码:1757 / 1817
页数:61
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