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Study of clay minerals suggests watery martian underground

This finding has implications about whether life existed on Mars and how its atmosphere has changed.
By Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, California, NASA Headquarters, Washington, D.C. Published: November 3, 2011
Martian-underground
Impact cratering and erosion combine to reveal the composition of the martian underground by exposing materials from the subsurface. Image Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/JHUAPL
A new NASA study suggests that if life ever existed on Mars, the longest-lasting habitats were most likely below the Red Planet’s surface.

A new interpretation of years of mineral-mapping data, from more than 350 sites on Mars examined by European and NASA orbiters, suggests martian environments with abundant liquid water on the surface existed only during short episodes. These episodes occurred toward the end of hundreds of millions of years during which warm water interacted with subsurface rocks. This has implications about whether life existed on Mars and how its atmosphere has changed.

“The types of clay minerals that formed in the shallow subsurface are all over Mars,” said John Mustard from Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island. “The types that formed on the surface are found at very limited locations and are quite rare.”

Discovery of clay minerals on Mars in 2005 indicated the planet once hosted warm, wet conditions. If those conditions existed on the surface for a long era, the planet would have needed a much thicker atmosphere than it has now to keep the water from evaporating or freezing. Researchers have sought evidence of processes that could cause a thick atmosphere to be lost over time.

This new study supports an alternative hypothesis that persistent warm water was confined to the subsurface and many erosional features were carved during brief periods when liquid water was stable at the surface.

“If surface habitats were short-term, that doesn’t mean we should be glum about prospects for life on Mars, but it says something about what type of environment we might want to look in,” said Bethany Ehlmann from the California Institute of Technology and NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California. “The most stable Mars habitats over long durations appear to have been in the subsurface. On Earth, underground geothermal environments have active ecosystems.”

The discovery of clay minerals by the OMEGA spectrometer on the European Space Agency’s Mars Express orbiter added to earlier evidence of liquid martian water. Clays form from the interaction of water with rock. Different types of clay minerals result from different types of wet conditions.

During the past five years, researchers used OMEGA and NASA’s Compact Reconnaissance Imaging Spectrometer (CRISM) instrument on the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter to identify clay minerals at thousands of locations on Mars. Clay minerals that form where the ratio of water interacting with rock is small generally retain the same chemical elements as the original volcanic rocks later altered by the water.

The study interprets this to be the case for most terrains on Mars with iron and magnesium clays. In contrast, surface environments with higher ratios of water to rock can alter rocks further. Soluble elements are carried off by water, and different aluminum-rich clays form.

Another clue is detection of a mineral called prehnite. It forms at temperatures above about 400° Fahrenheit (200° Celsius). These temperatures are typical of underground hydrothermal environments rather than surface waters.

“Our interpretation is a shift from thinking that the warm, wet environment was mostly at the surface to thinking it was mostly in the subsurface, with limited exceptions,” said Scott Murchie from Johns Hopkins University in Laurel, Maryland.

One of the exceptions may be Gale Crater, the site targeted by NASA’s Mars Science Laboratory mission. Launching this year, the Curiosity rover will land and investigate layers that contain clay and sulfate minerals.

NASA’s Mars Atmosphere and Volatile Evolution Mission (MAVEN), in development for a 2013 launch, may provide evidence for or against this new interpretation of the Red Planet’s environmental history. The report predicts MAVEN findings consistent with the atmosphere not having been thick enough to provide warm, wet surface conditions for a prolonged period.

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4 stars
BILL SIMPSON from LOUISIANA said:
What someone needs to do is to develop a model of the Martian interior. Then it might be possible to determine how long it took for the Sun to trash the atmosphere. (I know, it's a long shot.) Then it might be possible to estimate how long life may have had to evolve before the atmosphere disappeared and ultraviolet light cooked the surface. If it does way out there. (On Earth, no ozone layer up there, and you wouldn't need to worry about filling out your next income tax form.)
Don't get your hopes up about finding evidence of like on Mars. I hope I'm wrong, but won't be around to find out. If Elon Musk can develop a reusable rocket, people might one day live there. You can watch his speech to the National Press Club about the future of human space flight at www.spacex.com The 8 minute video riding the rocket into orbit is cool too. Notice how fast the rocket gets above Earth's atmosphere and how long the engine needs to fire to reach 17,500 miles per hour to stay in orbit. You can read a LOT about the development of the new J2X rocket engine on the Nasa Stennis Space Center blog. It is quite an amazing machine. When you read about the amount of hydrogen and oxygen being burned inside that thing, you can appreciate the need to stay away from it, until it is perfected. After it is perfected too.
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