02.15.07
NASA
Mars Orbiter Sees Effects of Ancient Underground Fluids
SAN FRANCISCO - Liquid or gas flowed through cracks penetrating underground
rock on Mars, according to a report based on some of the first observations
by NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter. These fluids may have produced
conditions to support possible habitats for microbial life.
These ancient patterns were revealed when the most powerful telescopic
camera ever sent to Mars began examining the planet last year. The
camera showed features as small as approximately 3 feet across. Mineralization
took place deep underground, along faults and fractures. These mineral
deposits became visible after overlying layers eroded throughout
millions of years.
Chris Okubo, a geologist at the University of Arizona, Tucson, discovered
the patterns in an image of exposed layers in a Martian canyon named
Candor Chasma. The High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment camera
aboard the orbiter took the image in September 2006.
"
What caught my eye was the bleaching or lack of dark material along
the fracture. That is a sign of mineral alteration by fluids that
moved through those joints," said Okubo. "It reminded me
of something I had seen during field studies in Utah, that is light-tone
zones, or 'haloes,' on either side of cracks through darker sandstone."
"
This result shows how orbital observations can identify features
of particular interest for future exploration on the surface or in
the subsurface or from sample return. The alteration along fractures,
concentrated by the underground fluids, marks locations where we
can expect to find key information about chemical and perhaps biologic
processes in a subsurface environment that may have been habitable," said
Alfred McEwen, principal investigator for the camera at the University
of Arizona, Tucson.
The haloes visible along fractures seen in the Candor Chasma image
appear to be raised slightly relative to surrounding, darker rock.
This is evidence that the circulating fluids hardened the lining
of the fractures, as well as bleaching it. The harder material would
not erode as quickly as softer material farther from the fractures.
"
The most likely origin for these features is that minerals that were
dissolved in water came out of solution and became part of the rock
material lining the fractures. Another possibility is that the circulating
fluid was a gas, which may or may not have included water vapor in
its composition," Okubo said.
Similar haloes adjacent to fractures show up in images that the high-resolution
camera took of other places on Mars after the initial Candor Chasma
image. "We are excited to be seeing geological features too
small to have been noticed previously," Okubo said.
"
This publication is just the first of many, many to come. The analysis
is based on test observations taken even before the start of our
main science phase. Since then, Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter has returned
several terabits of science data, sustaining a pace greater than
any other deep space mission. This flood of data will require years
of study to exploit their full value, forever increasing our understanding
of Mars and its history of climate change," said Richard Zurek,
project scientist for the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter at NASA's Jet
Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.