1. Detection of Perchlorate and the Soluble Chemistry of Martian Soil at the Phoenix Lander Site.
- Author
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Hecht, M. H., Kounaves, S. P., Quinn, R. C., West, S. J., Young, S. M. M., Ming, D. W., Catling, D. C., Clark, B. C., Boynton, W. V., Hoffman, J., DeFlores, L. P., Gospodinova, K., Kapit, J., and Smith, P. H.
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PERCHLORATES , *SOIL testing , *MARTIAN exploration , *MARTIAN geology , *MARTIAN surface , *SOIL leaching , *CARBONATES , *MARS (Planet) - Abstract
The Wet Chemistry Laboratory on the Phoenix Mars Lander performed aqueous chemical analyses of martian soil from the polygon-patterned northern plains of the Vastitas Borealis. The solutions contained ∼10 mM of dissolved salts with 0.4 to 0.6% perchlorate (ClO4) by mass leached from each sample. The remaining anions included small concentrations of chloride, bicarbonate, and possibly sulfate. Cations were dominated by Mg2+ and Na+, with small contributions from K+ and Ca2+. A moderately alkaline pH of 7.7 ± 0.5 was measured, consistent with a carbonate-buffered solution. Samples analyzed from the surface and the excavated boundary of the ∼5-centimeter- deep ice table showed no significant difference in soluble chemistry. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
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