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GEOREF RECORD

Evidence for water at Meridiani

Bradley L. Jolliff and Scott M. McLennan
Evidence for water at Meridiani
Elements (June 2006) 2 (3): 163-167

Abstract

The Mars Exploration Rover Opportunity has examined sedimentary structures in the Burns formation at Meridiani Planum. The materials in this formation reflect, in part, subaqueous deposition of reworked, sulfate-rich, clastic sediments that likely formed in a playa-interdune setting. The chemistry and mineralogy of the sedimentary rocks record an origin by evaporation of sulfate-and chloride-rich brines mixed with a fine, altered, basaltic mud or dust component, prior to reworking. Cementation and postdepositional reactions to form hematite-rich concretions and crystal-mold porosity reflect diagenesis in a groundwater-saturated subsurface. More recent dehydration events are evidenced by polygonal textures in rocks within craters and exposed on the plains. The timing of formation of fracture fillings that cut across bedding is not well constrained and may be early postdiagenetic or later. The fracture fillings may have formed by solutions remobilized along zones of weakness. Alteration rinds may reflect more recent interactions between rock and atmospheric water vapor.


ISSN: 1811-5209
Serial Title: Elements
Serial Volume: 2
Serial Issue: 3
Title: Evidence for water at Meridiani
Affiliation: Washington University, Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, St. Louis, MO, United States
Pages: 163-167
Published: 200606
Text Language: English
Publisher: Mineralogical Society of America and Mineralogical Society of Great Britain and Ireland and Mineralogical Association of Canada and Geochemical Society and Clay Minerals Society, International
References: 13
Accession Number: 2006-075379
Categories: Extraterrestrial geology
Document Type: Serial
Bibliographic Level: Analytic
Illustration Description: illus.
Secondary Affiliation: State University of New York at Stony Brook, USA, United States
Country of Publication: International
Secondary Affiliation: GeoRef, Copyright 2018, American Geosciences Institute.
Update Code: 200621

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