Search results for "Meridian"

showing 10 items of 42 documents

The Opportunity Rover's Athena Science Investigation at Meridiani Planum, Mars

2004

The Mars Exploration Rover Opportunity has investigated the landing site in Eagle crater and the nearby plains within Meridiani Planum. The soils consist of fine-grained basaltic sand and a surface lag of hematite-rich spherules, spherule fragments, and other granules. Wind ripples are common. Underlying the thin soil layer, and exposed within small impact craters and troughs, are flat-lying sedimentary rocks. These rocks are finely laminated, are rich in sulfur, and contain abundant sulfate salts. Small-scale cross-lamination in some locations provides evidence for deposition in flowing liquid water. We interpret the rocks to be a mixture of chemical and siliciclastic sediments formed by e…

Meridiani PlanumGeologic SedimentsMineralsMultidisciplinaryExtraterrestrial EnvironmentAtmosphereSilicatesGeochemistryMarsWaterMineralogyWindMars Exploration Programengineering.materialFerric CompoundsDiagenesisImpact craterConcretionengineeringSiliciclasticSedimentary rockComposition of MarsSpacecraftEvolution PlanetaryGeologyScience
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Identification of Morphological Biosignatures in Martian Analogue Field Specimens Using In Situ Planetary Instrumentation

2008

International audience; We have investigated how morphological biosignatures (i.e., features related to life) might be identified with an array of viable instruments within the framework of robotic planetary surface operations at Mars. This is the first time such an integrated lab-based study has been conducted that incorporates space-qualified instrumentation designed for combined in situ imaging, analysis, and geotechnics ( sampling). Specimens were selected on the basis of feature morphology, scale, and analogy to Mars rocks. Two types of morphological criteria were considered: potential signatures of extinct life ( fossilized microbial filaments) and of extant life (crypto-chasmoendolit…

Meridiani PlanumIn situGeologic Sediments010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesMOSSBAUER-SPECTROSCOPYInstrumentationOrigin of LifeAntarctic RegionsMarsGUSEV CRATERExploration of MarsCalcium Sulfate01 natural sciencesCRYPTOENDOLITHIC LICHENSCalcium CarbonateAstrobiologyRAMAN-SPECTROSCOPIC DETECTIONGermanyExobiology0103 physical sciences010303 astronomy & astrophysics0105 earth and related environmental sciencesRemote sensingMartianMineralsPlanetary surfaceSpectrometerMERIDIANI-PLANUMWESTERN-AUSTRALIAMars Exploration ProgramAgricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous)YELLOWSTONE-NATIONAL-PARK13. Climate actionSpace and Planetary ScienceMARS EXPLORATIONAmericasANTARCTIC HABITATSIron CompoundsGeologyHAUGHTON IMPACT STRUCTUREAstrobiology
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Geochemical modeling of evaporation processes on Mars: Insight from the sedimentary record at Meridiani Planum

2005

New data returned from the Mars Exploration Rover (MER) mission have revealed abundant evaporites in the sedimentary record at Meridiani Planum. A working hypothesis for Meridiani evaporite formation involves the evaporation of fluids derived from the weathering of martian basalt and subsequent diagenesis. On Earth, evaporite formation in exclusively basaltic settings is rare. However, models of the evaporation of fluids derived from experimentally weathering synthetic martian basalt provide insight into possible formation mechanisms. The thermodynamic database assembled for this investigation includes both Fe2+ and Fe3+ in Pitzer's ion interaction equations to evaluate Fe redox disequilibr…

Meridiani PlanumMartianEvaporiteGeochemistryengineering.materialDiagenesisGeophysicsSpace and Planetary ScienceGeochemistry and PetrologyJarositeEarth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous)engineeringSedimentary rockComposition of MarsGeologyGeochemical modelingEarth and Planetary Science Letters
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An integrated view of the chemistry and mineralogy of martian soils

2005

The mineralogical and elemental compositions of the martian soil are indicators of chemical and physical weathering processes. Using data from the Mars Exploration Rovers, we show that bright dust deposits on opposite sides of the planet are part of a global unit and not dominated by the composition of local rocks. Dark soil deposits at both sites have similar basaltic mineralogies, and could reflect either a global component or the general similarity in the compositions of the rocks from which they were derived. Increased levels of bromine are consistent with mobilization of soluble salts by thin films of liquid water, but the presence of olivine in analysed soil samples indicates that the…

Meridiani PlanumMultidisciplinaryOlivineSoil testMars Exploration RoverMineralogyWeatheringMartian soilengineering.materialmartian soilRocknestSoil waterengineeringComposition of Mars
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Exploration of Victoria Crater by the Mars Rover Opportunity

2009

“Lake” Victoria? After having explored the Eagle and Endurance craters, which are separated by only 800 meters, the Mars Exploration Rover Opportunity spent 2 years at Victoria, a much larger impact crater located 6 kilometers south across Meridiani Planum. Sedimentary rocks previously analyzed at Eagle and Endurance point to local environmental conditions that included abundant liquid water in the ancient past. Now, an analysis of rocks in the walls of Victoria by Squyres et al. (p. 1058 ) reveals that the aqueous alteration processes that operated at Eagle and Endurance also acted at Victoria. In addition, sedimentary layering in the crater walls preserves evidence of ancient windblown du…

Meridiani PlanumMultidisciplinaryWater on MarsExtraterrestrial EnvironmentGeochemistryMarsWaterMars Exploration Programengineering.materialFerric CompoundsMars roverImpact craterStratigraphyConcretionengineeringSedimentary rockSpacecraftGeology
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Chemistry and mineralogy of outcrops at Meridiani Planum

2005

Analyses of outcrops created by the impact craters Endurance, Fram and Eagle reveal the broad lateral continuity of chemical sediments at the Meridiani Planum exploration site on Mars. Approximately ten mineralogical components are implied in these salt-rich silicic sediments, from measurements by instruments on the Opportunity rover. Compositional trends in an apparently intact vertical stratigraphic sequence at the Karatepe West ingress point at Endurance crater are consistent with non-uniform deposition or with subsequent migration of mobile salt components, dominated by sulfates of magnesium. Striking variations in Cl and enrichments of Br, combined with diversity in sulfate species, pr…

Meridiani PlanumOutcropGeochemistrySilicicMineralogychemistry.chemical_compoundIgneous rockGeophysicschemistryImpact craterSpace and Planetary ScienceGeochemistry and PetrologyEarth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous)Sedimentary rockSulfateMaficGeologyEarth and Planetary Science Letters
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Provenance and diagenesis of the evaporite-bearing Burns formation, Meridiani Planum, Mars

2005

Abstract Impure reworked evaporitic sandstones, preserved on Meridiani Planum, Mars, are mixtures of roughly equal amounts of altered siliciclastic debris, of basaltic provenance (40 ± 10% by mass), and chemical constituents, dominated by evaporitic minerals (jarosite, Mg-, Ca-sulfates ± chlorides ± Fe-, Na-sulfates), hematite and possibly secondary silica (60 ± 10%). These chemical constituents and their relative abundances are not an equilibrium evaporite assemblage and to a substantial degree have been reworked by aeolian and subaqueous transport. Ultimately they formed by evaporation of acidic waters derived from interaction with olivine-bearing basalts and subsequent diagenetic alterat…

Meridiani PlanumProvenanceEvaporiteGeochemistryHematiteCementation (geology)DiagenesisGeophysicsSpace and Planetary ScienceGeochemistry and Petrologyvisual_artEarth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous)visual_art.visual_art_mediumSiliciclasticSedimentologyGeologyEarth and Planetary Science Letters
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Soils of Eagle crater and Meridiani Planum at the Opportunity Rover landing site.

2004

The soils at the Opportunity site are fine-grained basaltic sands mixed with dust and sulfate-rich outcrop debris. Hematite is concentrated in spherules eroded from the strata. Ongoing saltation exhumes the spherules and their fragments, concentrating them at the surface. Spherules emerge from soils coated, perhaps from subsurface cementation, by salts. Two types of vesicular clasts may represent basaltic sand sources. Eolian ripples, armored by well-sorted hematite-rich grains, pervade Meridiani Planum. The thickness of the soil on the plain is estimated to be about a meter. The flatness and thin cover suggest that the plain may represent the original sedimentary surface.

Meridiani PlanumRover Landing SiteGeologic SedimentsMineralsMultidisciplinaryExtraterrestrial EnvironmentOutcropSilicatesSpectrum AnalysisGeochemistryMineralogyMarsWaterHematiteFerric CompoundsImpact craterClastic rockvisual_artvisual_art.visual_art_mediumAeolian processesSedimentary rockMeridiani PlanumSpacecraftGraded beddingGeologyScience (New York, N.Y.)
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Iron mineralogy and aqueous alteration on Mars from the MER Mössbauer spectrometers

2008

The twin Mars Exploration Rovers Spirit (Gusev crater) and Opportunity (Meridiani Planum) used MIMOS II Moessbauer spectrometers to analyze martian surface materials in the first application of extraterrestrial Moessbauer spectroscopy. The instruments acquired spectra that identified the speciation of Fe according to oxidation state, coordination state, and mineralogical composition and provided quantitative information about the distribution of Fe among oxidation states, coordination states, and Fe-bearing phases. A total of 12 unique Fe-bearing phases were identified: Fe(2+) in olivine, pyroxene, and ilmenite; Fe(2+) and Fe(3+) in magnetite and chromite; Fe(3+) in nanophase ferric oxide (…

Meridiani Planumeducation.field_of_studyGoethiteOlivinePopulationGeochemistryMineralogyPyroxeneengineering.materialHematitevisual_artJarositevisual_art.visual_art_mediumengineeringeducationGeologyIlmenite
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An astrobiological perspective on Meridiani Planum

2005

Sedimentary rocks exposed in the Meridiani Planum region of Mars record aqueous and eolian deposition in ancient dune and interdune playa-like environments that were arid, acidic, and oxidizing. On Earth, microbial populations have repeatedly adapted to low pH and both episodic and chronic water limitation, suggesting that, to a first approximation, the Meridiani plain may have been habitable during at least part of the interval when deposition and early diagenesis took place. On the other hand, the environmental conditions inferred for Meridiani deposition would have posed a challenge for prebiotic chemical reactions thought to have played a role in the origin of life on Earth. Orbital obs…

Meridiani PlanummicrobiologyGeochemistryastrobiologyMarsMars Exploration ProgramHematiteenvironmental historyAstrobiologyDiagenesisGeophysicsSpace and Planetary ScienceGeochemistry and PetrologyAbiogenesisMartian surfacevisual_artEarth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous)visual_art.visual_art_mediumAeolian processesSedimentary rockMeridiani PlanumGeology
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