185 results on '"Hurowitz, J. A"'
Search Results
2. Pre-flight Geometric and Optical Calibration of the Planetary Instrument for X-ray Lithochemistry (PIXL)
- Author
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Klevang, D. A., Liebe, C. C., Henneke, J., Jørgensen, J. L., Sharrow, R., Setterfield, T., Wade, L., Sondheim, M., Foote, M., Elam, W. T., Heirwegh, C. M., Hurowitz, J., and Allwood, A.
- Published
- 2023
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3. Manganese‐Rich Sandstones as an Indicator of Ancient Oxic Lake Water Conditions in Gale Crater, Mars
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Gasda, P. J., primary, Lanza, N. L., additional, Meslin, P.‐Y., additional, Lamm, S. N., additional, Cousin, A., additional, Anderson, R., additional, Forni, O., additional, Swanner, E., additional, L’Haridon, J., additional, Frydenvang, J., additional, Thomas, N., additional, Gwizd, S., additional, Stein, N., additional, Fischer, W. W., additional, Hurowitz, J., additional, Sumner, D., additional, Rivera‐Hernández, F., additional, Crossey, L., additional, Ollila, A., additional, Essunfeld, A., additional, Newsom, H. E., additional, Clark, B., additional, Wiens, R. C., additional, Gasnault, O., additional, Clegg, S. M., additional, Maurice, S., additional, Delapp, D., additional, and Reyes‐Newell, A., additional
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- 2024
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4. Manganese-Rich Sandstones as an Indicator of Ancient Oxic Lake Water Conditions in Gale Crater, Mars
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Gasda, P. J., Lanza, N. L., Meslin, P. Y., Lamm, S. N., Cousin, A., Anderson, R., Forni, O., Swanner, E., L’Haridon, J., Frydenvang, J., Thomas, N., Gwizd, S., Stein, N., Fischer, W. W., Hurowitz, J., Sumner, D., Rivera-Hernández, F., Crossey, L., Ollila, A., Essunfeld, A., Newsom, H. E., Clark, B., Wiens, R. C., Gasnault, O., Clegg, S. M., Maurice, S., Delapp, D., Reyes-Newell, A., Gasda, P. J., Lanza, N. L., Meslin, P. Y., Lamm, S. N., Cousin, A., Anderson, R., Forni, O., Swanner, E., L’Haridon, J., Frydenvang, J., Thomas, N., Gwizd, S., Stein, N., Fischer, W. W., Hurowitz, J., Sumner, D., Rivera-Hernández, F., Crossey, L., Ollila, A., Essunfeld, A., Newsom, H. E., Clark, B., Wiens, R. C., Gasnault, O., Clegg, S. M., Maurice, S., Delapp, D., and Reyes-Newell, A.
- Abstract
Manganese has been observed on Mars by the NASA Curiosity rover in a variety of contexts and is an important indicator of redox processes in hydrologic systems on Earth. Within the Murray formation, an ancient primarily fine-grained lacustrine sedimentary deposit in Gale crater, Mars, have observed up to 45× enrichment in manganese and up to 1.5× enrichment in iron within coarser grained bedrock targets compared to the mean Murray sediment composition. This enrichment in manganese coincides with the transition between two stratigraphic units within the Murray: Sutton Island, interpreted as a lake margin environment, and Blunts Point, interpreted as a lake environment. On Earth, lacustrine environments are common locations of manganese precipitation due to highly oxidizing conditions in the lakes. Here, we explore three mechanisms for ferromanganese oxide precipitation at this location: authigenic precipitation from lake water along a lake shore, authigenic precipitation from reduced groundwater discharging through porous sands along a lake shore, and early diagenetic precipitation from groundwater through porous sands. All three scenarios require highly oxidizing conditions and we discuss oxidants that may be responsible for the oxidation and precipitation of manganese oxides. This work has important implications for the habitability of Mars to microbes that could have used Mn redox reactions, owing to its multiple redox states, as an energy source for metabolism.
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- 2024
5. Sedimentology and Stratigraphy of the Shenandoah Formation, Western Fan, Jezero Crater, Mars
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Stack, K. M., Ives, L. R. W., Gupta, S., Lamb, M. P., Tebolt, M., Caravaca, G., Grotzinger, J. P., Russell, P., Shuster, D. L., Williams, A. J., Amundsen, H., Alwmark, S., Annex, A. M., Barnes, R., Bell, J., Beyssac, O., Bosak, T., Crumpler, L. S., Dehouck, E., Gwizd, S. J., Hickman-Lewis, K., Horgan, B. H. N., Hurowitz, J., Kalucha, H., Kanine, O., Lesh, C., Maki, J., Mangold, N., Randazzo, N., Seeger, C., Williams, R. M. E., Brown, A., Cardarelli, E., Dypvik, H., Flannery, D., Frydenvang, J., Hamran, S.-E., Núñez, J. I., Paige, D., Simon, J. I., Tice, M., Tate, C., Wiens, R. C., Stack, K. M., Ives, L. R. W., Gupta, S., Lamb, M. P., Tebolt, M., Caravaca, G., Grotzinger, J. P., Russell, P., Shuster, D. L., Williams, A. J., Amundsen, H., Alwmark, S., Annex, A. M., Barnes, R., Bell, J., Beyssac, O., Bosak, T., Crumpler, L. S., Dehouck, E., Gwizd, S. J., Hickman-Lewis, K., Horgan, B. H. N., Hurowitz, J., Kalucha, H., Kanine, O., Lesh, C., Maki, J., Mangold, N., Randazzo, N., Seeger, C., Williams, R. M. E., Brown, A., Cardarelli, E., Dypvik, H., Flannery, D., Frydenvang, J., Hamran, S.-E., Núñez, J. I., Paige, D., Simon, J. I., Tice, M., Tate, C., and Wiens, R. C.
- Abstract
Sedimentary fans are key targets of exploration on Mars because they record the history of surface aqueous activity and habitability. The sedimentary fan extending from the Neretva Vallis breach of Jezero crater's western rim is one of the Mars 2020 Perseverance rover's main exploration targets. Perseverance spent ∼250 sols exploring and collecting seven rock cores from the lower ∼25 m of sedimentary rock exposed within the fan's eastern scarp, a sequence informally named the “Shenandoah” formation. This study describes the sedimentology and stratigraphy of the Shenandoah formation at two areas, “Cape Nukshak” and “Hawksbill Gap,” including a characterization, interpretation, and depositional framework for the facies that comprise it. The five main facies of the Shenandoah formation include: laminated mudstone, laminated sandstone, low-angle cross stratified sandstone, thin-bedded granule sandstone, and thick-bedded granule-pebble sandstone and conglomerate. These facies are organized into three facies associations (FA): FA1, comprised of laminated and soft sediment-deformed sandstone interbedded with broad, unconfined coarser-grained granule and pebbly sandstone intervals; FA2, comprised predominantly of laterally extensive, soft-sediment deformed laminated, sulfate-bearing mudstone with lenses of low-angle cross-stratified and scoured sandstone; and FA3, comprised of dipping planar, thin-bedded sand-gravel couplets. The depositional model favored for the Shenandoah formation involves the transition from a sand-dominated distal alluvial fan setting (FA1) to a stable, widespread saline lake (FA2), followed by the progradation of a river delta system (FA3) into the lake basin. This sequence records the initiation of a relatively long-lived, habitable lacustrine and deltaic environment within Jezero crater.
- Published
- 2024
6. Sedimentology and Stratigraphy of the Shenandoah Formation, Western Fan, Jezero Crater, Mars
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Stack, K. M., primary, Ives, L. R. W., additional, Gupta, S., additional, Lamb, M. P., additional, Tebolt, M., additional, Caravaca, G., additional, Grotzinger, J. P., additional, Russell, P., additional, Shuster, D. L., additional, Williams, A. J., additional, Amundsen, H., additional, Alwmark, S., additional, Annex, A. M., additional, Barnes, R., additional, Bell, J., additional, Beyssac, O., additional, Bosak, T., additional, Crumpler, L. S., additional, Dehouck, E., additional, Gwizd, S. J., additional, Hickman‐Lewis, K., additional, Horgan, B. H. N., additional, Hurowitz, J., additional, Kalucha, H., additional, Kanine, O., additional, Lesh, C., additional, Maki, J., additional, Mangold, N., additional, Randazzo, N., additional, Seeger, C., additional, Williams, R. M. E., additional, Brown, A., additional, Cardarelli, E., additional, Dypvik, H., additional, Flannery, D., additional, Frydenvang, J., additional, Hamran, S.‐E., additional, Núñez, J. I., additional, Paige, D., additional, Simon, J. I., additional, Tice, M., additional, Tate, C., additional, and Wiens, R. C., additional
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- 2024
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7. Artificial Space Weathering to Mimic Solar Wind Enhances the Toxicity of Lunar Dust Simulants in Human Lung Cells
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Chang, J. H. M., primary, Xue, Z., additional, Bauer, J., additional, Wehle, B., additional, Hendrix, D. A., additional, Catalano, T., additional, Hurowitz, J. A., additional, Nekvasil, H., additional, and Demple, B., additional
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- 2024
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8. A Habitable Fluvio-Lacustrine Environment at Yellowknife Bay, Gale Crater, Mars
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Grotzinger, JP, Sumner, DY, Kah, LC, Stack, K, Gupta, S, Edgar, L, Rubin, D, Lewis, K, Schieber, J, Mangold, N, Milliken, R, Conrad, PG, DesMarais, D, Farmer, J, Siebach, K, Calef, F, Hurowitz, J, McLennan, SM, Ming, D, Vaniman, D, Crisp, J, Vasavada, A, Edgett, KS, Malin, M, Blake, D, Gellert, R, Mahaffy, P, Wiens, RC, Maurice, S, Grant, JA, Wilson, S, Anderson, RC, Beegle, L, Arvidson, R, Hallet, B, Sletten, RS, Rice, M, Bell, J, Griffes, J, Ehlmann, B, Anderson, RB, Bristow, TF, Dietrich, WE, Dromart, G, Eigenbrode, J, Fraeman, A, Hardgrove, C, Herkenhoff, K, Jandura, L, Kocurek, G, Lee, S, Leshin, LA, Leveille, R, Limonadi, D, Maki, J, McCloskey, S, Meyer, M, Minitti, M, Newsom, H, Oehler, D, Okon, A, Palucis, M, Parker, T, Rowland, S, Schmidt, M, Squyres, S, Steele, A, Stolper, E, Summons, R, Treiman, A, Williams, R, Yingst, A, Team, MSL Science, Kemppinen, Osku, Bridges, Nathan, Johnson, Jeffrey R, Cremers, David, Godber, Austin, Wadhwa, Meenakshi, Wellington, Danika, McEwan, Ian, Newman, Claire, Richardson, Mark, Charpentier, Antoine, Peret, Laurent, King, Penelope, Blank, Jennifer, Weigle, Gerald, Li, Shuai, Robertson, Kevin, Sun, Vivian, Baker, Michael, Edwards, Christopher, Farley, Kenneth, Miller, Hayden, Newcombe, Megan, Pilorget, Cedric, Brunet, Claude, Hipkin, Victoria, and Léveillé, Richard
- Subjects
Bays ,Carbon ,Exobiology ,Extraterrestrial Environment ,Geologic Sediments ,Hydrogen ,Hydrogen-Ion Concentration ,Iron ,Mars ,Nitrogen ,Oxidation-Reduction ,Oxygen ,Phosphorus ,Salinity ,Sulfur ,Water ,MSL Science Team ,General Science & Technology - Abstract
The Curiosity rover discovered fine-grained sedimentary rocks, which are inferred to represent an ancient lake and preserve evidence of an environment that would have been suited to support a martian biosphere founded on chemolithoautotrophy. This aqueous environment was characterized by neutral pH, low salinity, and variable redox states of both iron and sulfur species. Carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, sulfur, nitrogen, and phosphorus were measured directly as key biogenic elements; by inference, phosphorus is assumed to have been available. The environment probably had a minimum duration of hundreds to tens of thousands of years. These results highlight the biological viability of fluvial-lacustrine environments in the post-Noachian history of Mars.
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- 2014
9. Redox stratification of an ancient lake in Gale crater, Mars
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Hurowitz, J. A., Grotzinger, J. P., Fischer, W. W., McLennan, S. M., Milliken, R. E., Stein, N., Vasavada, A. R., Blake, D. F., Dehouck, E., Eigenbrode, J. L., Fairén, A. G., Frydenvang, J., Gellert, R., Grant, J. A., Gupta, S., Herkenhoff, K. E., Ming, D. W., Rampe, E. B., Schmidt, M. E., Siebach, K. L., Stack-Morgan, K., Sumner, D. Y., and Wiens, R. C.
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- 2017
10. In situ energy-dispersive X-ray diffraction microscopy with the Planetary Instrument for X-ray Lithochemistry (PIXL) on Mars
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Jones, M. W. M., primary, Flannery, D. T., additional, Allwood, A. C., additional, Tice, M. M., additional, Hurowitz, J. A., additional, Liu, Y., additional, Orenstein, B. J., additional, Davidoff, S., additional, Tosca, N. J., additional, Moore, K. R., additional, Clark, B. C., additional, Van Bommel, S. J., additional, Schmidt, M. E., additional, Kizovski, T. V., additional, Treiman, A. H., additional, and O'Neil, L, additional
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- 2023
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11. The Mars Science Laboratory scooping campaign at Rocknest
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Anderson, R.C., Beegle, L.W., Hurowitz, J., Hanson, C., Abbey, W., Seybold, C., Liminodi, D., Kuhn, S., Jandura, L., Brown, K., Peters, G., Roumeliotis, C., Robinson, M., Edgett, K., Minitti, M., and Grotzinger, J.
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- 2015
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12. Deposition, exhumation, and paleoclimate of an ancient lake deposit, Gale crater, Mars
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Grotzinger, J. P., Gupta, S., Malin, M. C., Rubin, D. M., Schieber, J., Siebach, K., Sumner, D. Y., Stack, K. M., Vasavada, A. R., Arvidson, R. E., Calef, F., Edgar, L., Fischer, W. F., Grant, J. A., Griffes, J., Kah, L. C., Lamb, M. P., Lewis, K. W., Mangold, N., Minitti, M. E., Palucis, M., Rice, M., Williams, R. M. E., Yingst, R. A., Blake, D., Blaney, D., Conrad, P., Crisp, J., Dietrich, W. E., Dromart, G., Edgett, K. S., Ewing, R. C., Gellert, R., Hurowitz, J. A., Kocurek, G., Mahaffy, P., McBride, M. J., McLennan, S. M., Mischna, M., Ming, D., Milliken, R., Newsom, H., Oehler, D., Parker, T. J., Vaniman, D., Wiens, R. C., and Wilson, S. A.
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- 2015
13. An olivine cumulate outcrop on the floor of Jezero crater, Mars
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Liu, Y., primary, Tice, M. M., additional, Schmidt, M. E., additional, Treiman, A. H., additional, Kizovski, T. V., additional, Hurowitz, J. A., additional, Allwood, A. C., additional, Henneke, J., additional, Pedersen, D. A. K., additional, VanBommel, S. J., additional, Jones, M. W. M., additional, Knight, A. L., additional, Orenstein, B. J., additional, Clark, B. C., additional, Elam, W. T., additional, Heirwegh, C. M., additional, Barber, T., additional, Beegle, L. W., additional, Benzerara, K., additional, Bernard, S., additional, Beyssac, O., additional, Bosak, T., additional, Brown, A. J., additional, Cardarelli, E. L., additional, Catling, D. C., additional, Christian, J. R., additional, Cloutis, E. A., additional, Cohen, B. A., additional, Davidoff, S., additional, Fairén, A. G., additional, Farley, K. A., additional, Flannery, D. T., additional, Galvin, A., additional, Grotzinger, J. P., additional, Gupta, S., additional, Hall, J., additional, Herd, C. D. K., additional, Hickman-Lewis, K., additional, Hodyss, R. P., additional, Horgan, B. H. N., additional, Johnson, J. R., additional, Jørgensen, J. L., additional, Kah, L. C., additional, Maki, J. N., additional, Mandon, L., additional, Mangold, N., additional, McCubbin, F. M., additional, McLennan, S. M., additional, Moore, K., additional, Nachon, M., additional, Nemere, P., additional, Nothdurft, L. D., additional, Núñez, J. I., additional, O’Neil, L., additional, Quantin-Nataf, C. M., additional, Sautter, V., additional, Shuster, D. L., additional, Siebach, K. L., additional, Simon, J. I., additional, Sinclair, K. P., additional, Stack, K. M., additional, Steele, A., additional, Tarnas, J. D., additional, Tosca, N. J., additional, Uckert, K., additional, Udry, A., additional, Wade, L. A., additional, Weiss, B. P., additional, Wiens, R. C., additional, Williford, K. H., additional, and Zorzano, M.-P., additional
- Published
- 2022
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14. Aqueously altered igneous rocks sampled on the floor of Jezero crater, Mars
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Farley, K. A., primary, Stack, K. M., additional, Shuster, D. L., additional, Horgan, B. H. N., additional, Hurowitz, J. A., additional, Tarnas, J. D., additional, Simon, J. I., additional, Sun, V. Z., additional, Scheller, E. L., additional, Moore, K. R., additional, McLennan, S. M., additional, Vasconcelos, P. M., additional, Wiens, R. C., additional, Treiman, A. H., additional, Mayhew, L. E., additional, Beyssac, O., additional, Kizovski, T. V., additional, Tosca, N. J., additional, Williford, K. H., additional, Crumpler, L. S., additional, Beegle, L. W., additional, Bell, J. F., additional, Ehlmann, B. L., additional, Liu, Y., additional, Maki, J. N., additional, Schmidt, M. E., additional, Allwood, A. C., additional, Amundsen, H. E. F., additional, Bhartia, R., additional, Bosak, T., additional, Brown, A. J., additional, Clark, B. C., additional, Cousin, A., additional, Forni, O., additional, Gabriel, T. S. J., additional, Goreva, Y., additional, Gupta, S., additional, Hamran, S.-E., additional, Herd, C. D. K., additional, Hickman-Lewis, K., additional, Johnson, J. R., additional, Kah, L. C., additional, Kelemen, P. B., additional, Kinch, K. B., additional, Mandon, L., additional, Mangold, N., additional, Quantin-Nataf, C., additional, Rice, M. S., additional, Russell, P. S., additional, Sharma, S., additional, Siljeström, S., additional, Steele, A., additional, Sullivan, R., additional, Wadhwa, M., additional, Weiss, B. P., additional, Williams, A. J., additional, Wogsland, B. V., additional, Willis, P. A., additional, Acosta-Maeda, T. A., additional, Beck, P., additional, Benzerara, K., additional, Bernard, S., additional, Burton, A. S., additional, Cardarelli, E. L., additional, Chide, B., additional, Clavé, E., additional, Cloutis, E. A., additional, Cohen, B. A., additional, Czaja, A. D., additional, Debaille, V., additional, Dehouck, E., additional, Fairén, A. G., additional, Flannery, D. T., additional, Fleron, S. Z., additional, Fouchet, T., additional, Frydenvang, J., additional, Garczynski, B. J., additional, Gibbons, E. F., additional, Hausrath, E. M., additional, Hayes, A. G., additional, Henneke, J., additional, Jørgensen, J. L., additional, Kelly, E. M., additional, Lasue, J., additional, Le Mouélic, S., additional, Madariaga, J. M., additional, Maurice, S., additional, Merusi, M., additional, Meslin, P.-Y., additional, Milkovich, S. M., additional, Million, C. C., additional, Moeller, R. C., additional, Núñez, J. I., additional, Ollila, A. M., additional, Paar, G., additional, Paige, D. A., additional, Pedersen, D. A. K., additional, Pilleri, P., additional, Pilorget, C., additional, Pinet, P. C., additional, Rice, J. W., additional, Royer, C., additional, Sautter, V., additional, Schulte, M., additional, Sephton, M. A., additional, Sharma, S. K., additional, Sholes, S. F., additional, Spanovich, N., additional, St. Clair, M., additional, Tate, C. D., additional, Uckert, K., additional, VanBommel, S. J., additional, Yanchilina, A. G., additional, and Zorzano, M.-P., additional
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- 2022
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15. Mineralogy of a Mudstone at Yellowknife Bay, Gale Crater, Mars
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MSL Science Team, Vaniman, D. T., Bish, D. L., Ming, D. W., Bristow, T. F., Morris, R. V., Blake, D. F., Chipera, S. J., Morrison, S. M., Treiman, A. H., Rampe, E. B., Rice, M., Achilles, C. N., Grotzinger, J. P., McLennan, S. M., Williams, J., Bell, J. F., Newsom, H. E., Downs, R. T., Maurice, S., Sarrazin, P., Yen, A. S., Morookian, J. M., Farmer, J. D., Stack, K., Milliken, R. E., Ehlmann, B. L., Sumner, D. Y., Berger, G., Crisp, J. A., Hurowitz, J. A., Anderson, R., Des Marais, D. J., Stolper, E. M., Edgett, K. S., Gupta, S., and Spanovich, N.
- Published
- 2014
16. In Situ Radiometric and Exposure Age Dating of the Martian Surface
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MSL Science Team, Farley, K. A., Malespin, C., Mahaffy, P., Grotzinger, J. P., Vasconcelos, P. M., Milliken, R. E., Malin, M., Edgett, K. S., Pavlov, A. A., Hurowitz, J. A., Grant, J. A., Miller, H. B., Arvidson, R., Beegle, L., Calef, F., Conrad, P. G., Dietrich, W. E., Eigenbrode, J., Gellert, R., Gupta, S., Hamilton, V., Hassler, D. M., Lewis, K. W., McLennan, S. M., Ming, D., Navarro-González, R., Schwenzer, S. P., Steele, A., Stolper, E. M., Sumner, D. Y., Vaniman, D., Vasavada, A., Williford, K., and Wimmer-Schweingruber, R. F.
- Published
- 2014
17. Elemental Geochemistry of Sedimentary Rocks at Yellowknife Bay, Gale Crater, Mars
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MSL Science Team, McLennan, S. M., Anderson, R. B., Bell, J. F., Bridges, J. C., Calef, F., Campbell, J. L., Clark, B. C., Clegg, S., Conrad, P., Cousin, A., Des Marais, D. J., Dromart, G., Dyar, M. D., Edgar, L. A., Ehlmann, B. L., Fabre, C., Forni, O., Gasnault, O., Gellert, R., Gordon, S., Grant, J. A., Grotzinger, J. P., Gupta, S., Herkenhoff, K. E., Hurowitz, J. A., King, P. L., Le Mouélic, S., Leshin, L. A., Léveillé, R., Lewis, K. W., Mangold, N., Maurice, S., Ming, D. W., Morris, R. V., Nachon, M., Newsom, H. E., Ollila, A. M., Perrett, G. M., Rice, M. S., Schmidt, M. E., Schwenzer, S. P., Stack, K., Stolper, E. M., Sumner, D. Y., Treiman, A. H., VanBommel, S., Vaniman, D. T., Vasavada, A., Wiens, R. C., and Yingst, R. A.
- Published
- 2014
18. Volatile and Organic Compositions of Sedimentary Rocks in Yellowknife Bay, Gale Crater, Mars
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MSL Science Team, Ming, D. W., Archer, P. D., Glavin, D. P., Eigenbrode, J. L., Franz, H. B., Sutter, B., Brunner, A. E., Stern, J. C., Freissinet, C., McAdam, A. C., Mahaffy, P. R., Cabane, M., Coll, P., Campbell, J. L., Atreya, S. K., Niles, P. B., Bell, J. F., Bish, D. L., Brinckerhoff, W. B., Buch, A., Conrad, P. G., Des Marais, D. J., Ehlmann, B. L., Fairén, A. G., Farley, K., Flesch, G. J., Francois, P., Gellert, R., Grant, J. A., Grotzinger, J. P., Gupta, S., Herkenhoff, K. E., Hurowitz, J. A., Leshin, L. A., Lewis, K. W., McLennan, S. M., Miller, K. E., Moersch, J., Morris, R. V., Navarro-González, R., Pavlov, A. A., Perrett, G. M., Pradler, I., Squyres, S. W., Summons, R. E., Steele, A., Stolper, E. M., Sumner, D. Y., Szopa, C., Teinturier, S., Trainer, M. G., Treiman, A. H., Vaniman, D. T., Vasavada, A. R., Webster, C. R., Wray, J. J., and Yingst, R. A.
- Published
- 2014
19. A Habitable Fluvio-Lacustrine Environment at Yellowknife Bay, Gale Crater, Mars
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MSL Science Team, Grotzinger, J. P., Sumner, D. Y., Kah, L. C., Stack, K., Gupta, S., Edgar, L., Rubin, D., Lewis, K., Schieber, J., Mangold, N., Milliken, R., Conrad, P. G., DesMarais, D., Farmer, J., Siebach, K., Calef, F., Hurowitz, J., McLennan, S. M., Ming, D., Vaniman, D., Crisp, J., Vasavada, A., Edgett, K. S., Malin, M., Blake, D., Gellert, R., Mahaffy, P., Wiens, R. C., Maurice, S., Grant, J. A., Wilson, S., Anderson, R. C., Beegle, L., Arvidson, R., Hallet, B., Sletten, R. S., Rice, M., Bell, J., Griffes, J., Ehlmann, B., Anderson, R. B., Bristow, T. F., Dietrich, W. E., Dromart, G., Eigenbrode, J., Fraeman, A., Hardgrove, C., Herkenhoff, K., Jandura, L., Kocurek, G., Lee, S., Leshin, L. A., Leveille, R., Limonadi, D., Maki, J., McCloskey, S., Meyer, M., Minitti, M., Newsom, H., Oehler, D., Okon, A., Palucis, M., Parker, T., Rowland, S., Schmidt, M., Squyres, S., Steele, A., Stolper, E., Summons, R., Treiman, A., Williams, R., and Yingst, A.
- Published
- 2014
20. Evaluating perspectives from past missions to shape future investigations using the Mars 2020 Planetary Instrument for X-ray Lithochemistry
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Elam, W. T, Hurowitz, J. A, Flannery, D. T, Allwood, A. C, Clark, B. C, and Heirwegh, C. M
- Abstract
UNKNOWN
- Published
- 2018
21. Evaluating perspectives from past missions to shape future investigations using the Mars 2020 Planetary Instrument for X-ray Lithochemistry
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Heirwegh, C. M, Clark, B. C, Allwood, A. C, Flannery, D. T, Hurowitz, J. A, and Elam, W. T
- Published
- 2018
22. Highly Differentiated Basaltic Lavas Examined by PIXL in Jezero Crater
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Schmidt, M. E., Allwood, A., Christian, J., Clark, B., Flannery, David, Hennecke, J., Herd, C. D. K., Hurowitz, J. A., Kizovski, Tanya V., Liu, Y., McLennan, S. M., Nachon, Marion, Pedersen, D. A. K., Shuster, D. L., Simon, J. I., Tice, M., Tosca, Nicholas, Treiman, A. H., Udry, Arya, Van Bommel, Scott, Wadhwa, Meenakshi, Schmidt, M. E., Allwood, A., Christian, J., Clark, B., Flannery, David, Hennecke, J., Herd, C. D. K., Hurowitz, J. A., Kizovski, Tanya V., Liu, Y., McLennan, S. M., Nachon, Marion, Pedersen, D. A. K., Shuster, D. L., Simon, J. I., Tice, M., Tosca, Nicholas, Treiman, A. H., Udry, Arya, Van Bommel, Scott, and Wadhwa, Meenakshi
- Abstract
Textural, bulk chemical, and mineralogical data collected by PIXL (Planetary Instrument for X-ray Lithochemistry) indicate that the first rock unit (Cf-fr, Crater Floor-Fractured rough) examined by the M2020 Perseverance rover in Jezero crater is from a basaltic lava flow. This unit was originally mapped as volcanic flow [1] but has been reinterpreted as a clastic or volcaniclastic sediment [2]. We here present evidence that it is a basalt flow, with implications for its petrogenesis as a highly differentiated basalt.
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- 2022
23. Aqueously altered igneous rocks sampled on the floor of Jezero crater, Mars
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Farley, K A, Stack, K M, Shuster, D L, Horgan, B H N, Hurowitz, J A, Tarnas, J D, Simon, J I, Sun, V Z, Scheller, E L, Moore, K R, McLennan, S M, Vasconcelos, P M, Wiens, R C, Treiman, A H, Mayhew, L E, Beyssac, O, Kizovski, T V, Tosca, N J, Williford, K H, Crumpler, L S, Beegle, L W, Bell, J F, Ehlmann, B L, Liu, Y, Maki, J N, Schmidt, M E, Allwood, A C, Amundsen, H E F, Bhartia, R, Bosak, T, Brown, A J, Clark, B C, Cousin, A, Forni, O, Gabriel, T S J, Goreva, Y, Gupta, S, Hamran, S-E, Herd, C D K, Hickman-Lewis, K, Johnson, J R, Kah, L C, Kelemen, P B, Kinch, K B, Mandon, L, Mangold, N, Quantin-Nataf, C, Rice, M S, Russell, P S, Sharma, S K, Siljeström, S, Steele, A, Sullivan, R, Wadhwa, M, Weiss, B P, Williams, A J, Wogsland, B V, Willis, P A, Acosta-Maeda, T A, Beck, P, Benzerara, K, Bernard, S, Burton, A S, Cardarelli, E L, Chide, B, Clavé, E, Cloutis, E A, Cohen, B A, Czaja, A D, Debaille, V, Dehouck, E, Fairén, A G, Flannery, D T, Fleron, S Z, Fouchet, T, Frydenvang, J, Garczynski, B J, Gibbons, E F, Hausrath, E M, Hayes, A G, Henneke, J, Jørgensen, J L, Kelly, E M, Lasue, J, Le Mouélic, S, Madariaga, J M, Maurice, S, Merusi, M, Meslin, P-Y, Milkovich, S M, Million, C C, Moeller, R C, Núñez, J I, Ollila, A M, Paar, G, Paige, D A, Pedersen, D A K, Pilleri, P, Pilorget, C, Pinet, P C, Rice, J W, Royer, C, Sautter, V, Schulte, M, Sephton, M A, Sholes, S F, Spanovich, N, St Clair, M, Tate, C D, Uckert, K, VanBommel, S J, Yanchilina, A G, Zorzano, M-P, Farley, K A, Stack, K M, Shuster, D L, Horgan, B H N, Hurowitz, J A, Tarnas, J D, Simon, J I, Sun, V Z, Scheller, E L, Moore, K R, McLennan, S M, Vasconcelos, P M, Wiens, R C, Treiman, A H, Mayhew, L E, Beyssac, O, Kizovski, T V, Tosca, N J, Williford, K H, Crumpler, L S, Beegle, L W, Bell, J F, Ehlmann, B L, Liu, Y, Maki, J N, Schmidt, M E, Allwood, A C, Amundsen, H E F, Bhartia, R, Bosak, T, Brown, A J, Clark, B C, Cousin, A, Forni, O, Gabriel, T S J, Goreva, Y, Gupta, S, Hamran, S-E, Herd, C D K, Hickman-Lewis, K, Johnson, J R, Kah, L C, Kelemen, P B, Kinch, K B, Mandon, L, Mangold, N, Quantin-Nataf, C, Rice, M S, Russell, P S, Sharma, S K, Siljeström, S, Steele, A, Sullivan, R, Wadhwa, M, Weiss, B P, Williams, A J, Wogsland, B V, Willis, P A, Acosta-Maeda, T A, Beck, P, Benzerara, K, Bernard, S, Burton, A S, Cardarelli, E L, Chide, B, Clavé, E, Cloutis, E A, Cohen, B A, Czaja, A D, Debaille, V, Dehouck, E, Fairén, A G, Flannery, D T, Fleron, S Z, Fouchet, T, Frydenvang, J, Garczynski, B J, Gibbons, E F, Hausrath, E M, Hayes, A G, Henneke, J, Jørgensen, J L, Kelly, E M, Lasue, J, Le Mouélic, S, Madariaga, J M, Maurice, S, Merusi, M, Meslin, P-Y, Milkovich, S M, Million, C C, Moeller, R C, Núñez, J I, Ollila, A M, Paar, G, Paige, D A, Pedersen, D A K, Pilleri, P, Pilorget, C, Pinet, P C, Rice, J W, Royer, C, Sautter, V, Schulte, M, Sephton, M A, Sholes, S F, Spanovich, N, St Clair, M, Tate, C D, Uckert, K, VanBommel, S J, Yanchilina, A G, and Zorzano, M-P
- Abstract
The Perseverance rover landed in Jezero crater, Mars, to investigate ancient lake and river deposits. We report observations of the crater floor, below the crater’s sedimentary delta, finding the floor consists of igneous rocks altered by water. The lowest exposed unit, informally named Séítah, is a coarsely crystalline olivine-rich rock, which accumulated at the base of a magma body. Fe-Mg carbonates along grain boundaries indicate reactions with CO2-rich water, under water-poor conditions. Overlying Séítah is a unit informally named Máaz, which we interpret as lava flows or the chemical complement to Séítah in a layered igneous body. Voids in these rocks contain sulfates and perchlorates, likely introduced by later near-surface brine evaporation. Core samples of these rocks were stored aboard Perseverance for potential return to Earth.
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- 2022
24. Aqueously altered igneous rocks sampled on the floor of Jezero crater, Mars
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Farley, K. A., Stack, K. M., Shuster, D. L., Horgan, B. H. N., Hurowitz, J. A., Tarnas, J. D., Simon, J. I., Sun, V. Z., Scheller, E. L., Moore, K. R., McLennan, S. M., Vasconcelos, P. M., Wiens, R. C., Treiman, A. H., Mayhew, L. E., Beyssac, O., Kizovski, T. V., Tosca, N. J., Williford, K. H., Crumpler, L. S., Beegle, L. W., Bell, J. F., Ehlmann, B. L., Liu, Y., Maki, J. N., Schmidt, M. E., Allwood, A. C., Amundsen, H. E. F., Bhartia, R., Bosak, T., Brown, A. J., Clark, B. C., Cousin, A., Forni, O., Gabriel, T. S. J., Goreva, Y., Gupta, S., Hamran, S.-E., Herd, C. D. K., Hickman-Lewis, K., Johnson, J. R., Kah, L. C., Kelemen, P. B., Kinch, K. B., Mandon, L., Mangold, N., Quantin-Nataf, C., Rice, M. S., Russell, P. S., Sharma, S., Siljeström, S., Steele, A., Sullivan, R., Wadhwa, M., Weiss, B. P., Williams, A. J., Wogsland, B. V., Willis, P. A., Acosta-Maeda, T. A., Beck, P., Benzerara, K., Bernard, S., Burton, A. S., Cardarelli, E. L., Chide, B., Clavé, E., Cloutis, E. A., Cohen, B. A., Czaja, A. D., Debaille, V., Dehouck, E., Fairén, A. G., Flannery, D. T., Fleron, S. Z., Fouchet, T., Frydenvang, J., Garczynski, B. J., Gibbons, E. F., Hausrath, E. M., Hayes, A. G., Henneke, J., Jørgensen, J. L., Kelly, E. M., Lasue, J., Le Mouélic, S., Madariaga, J. M., Maurice, S., Merusi, M., Meslin, P.-Y., Milkovich, S. M., Million, C. C., Moeller, R. C., Nuñez, J. I., Ollila, A. M., Paar, G., Paige, D. A., Pedersen, D. A. K., Pilleri, P., Pilorget, C., Pinet, P. C., Rice, J. W., Royer, C., Sautter, V., Schulte, M., Sephton, M. A., Sharma, S. K., Sholes, S. F., Spanovich, N., Clair, M. St., Tate, C. D., Uckert, K., VanBommel, S. J., Yanchilina, A. G., Zorzano, M.-P., Farley, K. A., Stack, K. M., Shuster, D. L., Horgan, B. H. N., Hurowitz, J. A., Tarnas, J. D., Simon, J. I., Sun, V. Z., Scheller, E. L., Moore, K. R., McLennan, S. M., Vasconcelos, P. M., Wiens, R. C., Treiman, A. H., Mayhew, L. E., Beyssac, O., Kizovski, T. V., Tosca, N. J., Williford, K. H., Crumpler, L. S., Beegle, L. W., Bell, J. F., Ehlmann, B. L., Liu, Y., Maki, J. N., Schmidt, M. E., Allwood, A. C., Amundsen, H. E. F., Bhartia, R., Bosak, T., Brown, A. J., Clark, B. C., Cousin, A., Forni, O., Gabriel, T. S. J., Goreva, Y., Gupta, S., Hamran, S.-E., Herd, C. D. K., Hickman-Lewis, K., Johnson, J. R., Kah, L. C., Kelemen, P. B., Kinch, K. B., Mandon, L., Mangold, N., Quantin-Nataf, C., Rice, M. S., Russell, P. S., Sharma, S., Siljeström, S., Steele, A., Sullivan, R., Wadhwa, M., Weiss, B. P., Williams, A. J., Wogsland, B. V., Willis, P. A., Acosta-Maeda, T. A., Beck, P., Benzerara, K., Bernard, S., Burton, A. S., Cardarelli, E. L., Chide, B., Clavé, E., Cloutis, E. A., Cohen, B. A., Czaja, A. D., Debaille, V., Dehouck, E., Fairén, A. G., Flannery, D. T., Fleron, S. Z., Fouchet, T., Frydenvang, J., Garczynski, B. J., Gibbons, E. F., Hausrath, E. M., Hayes, A. G., Henneke, J., Jørgensen, J. L., Kelly, E. M., Lasue, J., Le Mouélic, S., Madariaga, J. M., Maurice, S., Merusi, M., Meslin, P.-Y., Milkovich, S. M., Million, C. C., Moeller, R. C., Nuñez, J. I., Ollila, A. M., Paar, G., Paige, D. A., Pedersen, D. A. K., Pilleri, P., Pilorget, C., Pinet, P. C., Rice, J. W., Royer, C., Sautter, V., Schulte, M., Sephton, M. A., Sharma, S. K., Sholes, S. F., Spanovich, N., Clair, M. St., Tate, C. D., Uckert, K., VanBommel, S. J., Yanchilina, A. G., and Zorzano, M.-P.
- Abstract
The Perseverance rover landed in Jezero crater, Mars, to investigate ancient lake and river deposits. We report observations of the crater floor, below the crater's sedimentary delta, finding that the floor consists of igneous rocks altered by water. The lowest exposed unit, informally named Seitah, is a coarsely crystalline olivine-rich rock, which accumulated at the base of a magma body. Magnesium-iron carbonates along grain boundaries indicate reactions with carbon dioxide-rich water under water-poor conditions. Overlying Seitah is a unit informally named Maaz, which we interpret as lava flows or the chemical complement to Seitah in a layered igneous body. Voids in these rocks contain sulfates and perchlorates, likely introduced by later near-surface brine evaporation. Core samples of these rocks have been stored aboard Perseverance for potential return to Earth.
- Published
- 2022
25. Ancient Impact and Aqueous Processes at Endeavour Crater, Mars
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Squyres, S. W., Arvidson, R. E., Bell, J. F., Calef, F., Clark, B. C., Cohen, B. A., Crumpler, L. A., de Souza, P. A., Farrand, W. H., Gellert, R., Grant, J., Herkenhoff, K. E., Hurowitz, J. A., Johnson, J. R., Jolliff, B. L., Knoll, A. H., Li, R., McLennan, S. M., Ming, D. W., Mittlefehldt, D. W., Parker, T. J., Paulsen, G., Rice, M. S., Ruff, S. W., Schröder, C., Yen, A. S., and Zacny, K.
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- 2012
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26. Large Sulphur Isotope Fractionations in Martian Sediments at Gale Crater
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Franz, H. B, McAdam, A. C, Ming, D. W, Freissinet, C, Mahaffy, Paul, Eldridge, D. L, Fischer, W. W, Grotzinger, J. P, House, C. H, Hurowitz, J. A, McLennan, S. M, Schwenzer, S. P, Vaniman, D. T, Archer, P. D. Jr, Atreya, S. K, Conrad, P. G, Dottin, J. W. III, Eigenbrode, J. L, Farley, K. A, Glavin, D. P, Johnson, S. S, Knudson, C. A, Morris, R. V, Navarro-Gonzalez, R, Pavlov, A. A, Plummer, R, Rampe, E. B, Stern, J. C, Steele, A, Summons, R. E, and Sutter, B
- Subjects
Lunar And Planetary Science And Exploration - Abstract
Variability in the sulfur isotopic composition in sediments can reflect atmospheric, geologic and biological processes. Evidence for ancient fluvio-lacustrine environments at Gale crater on Mars and a lack of efficient crustal recycling mechanisms on the planet suggests a surface environment that was once warm enough to allow the presence of liquid water, at least for discrete periods of time, and implies a greenhouse effect that may have been influenced by sulfur-bearing volcanic gases. Here we report in situ analyses of the sulfur isotopic compositions of SO2 volatilized from ten sediment samples acquired by NASA's Curiosity rover along a 13 km traverse of Gale crater. We find large variations in sulfur isotopic composition that exceed those measured for Martian meteorites and show both depletion and enrichment in S-34. Measured values of δS-34 range from -47 +/- 14% to 28 +/- 7%, similar to the range typical of terrestrial environments. Although limited geochronological constraints on the stratigraphy traversed by Curiosity are available, we propose that the observed sulfur isotopic signatures at Gale crater can be explained by equilibrium fractionation between sulfate and sulfide in an impact-driven hydrothermal system and atmospheric processing of sulfur-bearing gases during transient warm periods.
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- 2017
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27. Discordant K-Ar and Young Exposure Dates for the Windjana Sandstone, Kimberley, Gale Crater, Mars
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Vasconcelos, P. M, Farley, K. A, Malespin, C. A, Mahaffy, P, Ming, D, McLennan, S. M, Hurowitz, J. A, and Rice, Melissa S
- Subjects
Lunar And Planetary Science And Exploration - Abstract
K-Ar and noble gas surface exposure age measurements were carried out on the Windjana sandstone, Kimberley region, Gale Crater, Mars, by using the Sample Analysis at Mars instrument on the Curiosity rover. The sandstone is unusually rich in sanidine, as determined by CheMin X-ray diffraction, contributing to the high K2O concentration of 3.09 +/- 0.20 wt % measured by Alpha-Particle X-ray Spectrometer analysis. A sandstone aliquot heated to approximately 915 C yielded a K-Ar age of 627 +/- 50 Ma. Reheating this aliquot yielded no additional Ar. A second aliquot heated in the same way yielded a much higher K-Ar age of 1710 +/- 110 Ma. These data suggest incomplete Ar extraction from a rock with a K-Ar age older than 1710 Ma. Incomplete extraction at approximately 900 C is not surprising for a rock with a large fraction of K carried by Ar-retentive K-feldspar. Likely, variability in the exact temperature achieved by the sample from run to run, uncertainties in sample mass estimation, and possible mineral fractionation during transport and storage prior to analysis may contribute to these discrepant data. Cosmic ray exposure ages from He-3 and Ne-21 in the two aliquots are minimum values given the possibility of incomplete extraction. However, the general similarity between the He-3 (57 +/- 49 and 18 +/- 32 Ma, mean 30 Ma) and Ne-21 (2 +/- 32 and 83 +/- 24 Ma, mean 54 Ma) exposure ages provides no evidence for underextraction. The implied erosion rate at the Kimberley location is similar to that reported at the nearby Yellowknife Bay outcrop.
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- 2016
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28. Authigenesis/Diagenesis of the Murray Formation Mudstone in Gale Crater, Mars
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Ming, D. W, Rampe, E. B, Grotzinger, J. P, Hurowitz, J. A, Morris, R. V, Yen, A. S, Blake, D. B, Geller, R, and Sutter, B
- Subjects
Lunar And Planetary Science And Exploration - Abstract
The Mars Science Laboratory rover Curiosity has been exploring sedimentary deposits in Gale crater since August, 2012. The rover has traversed up section through approximately 150 m of sedimentary rocks deposited in fluvial, deltaic, and lacustrine environments (Bradbury group and overlying Mount Sharp group). The Murray formation lies at the base of the Mt. Sharp group and has been interpreted to be a finely laminated mudstone likely deposited in a subaqueous lacustrine environment. Four drill samples from several elevations in the Murray fm have been acquired by the rover's sampling system and delivered to the CheMin XRD instrument. The lower section of the Murray fm contains 2:1 phyllosilicate(s), hematite, jarosite, XRD amorphous materials, and primary basaltic minerals. Further up section, the Murray fm contains magnetite, cristobalite, tridymite, abundant Si-rich XRD amorphous materials along with plagioclase and K-feldspars. Murray formation materials appear to have been altered under an open hydrologic system based on the bulk chemistry of these materials measured by the Alpha Particle X-ray Spectrometer (APXS). The 2:1 phyllosilicate only occurs in the lowermost section of the Murray fm and may be detrital or formed during authigenesis of Murray fm materials, similar to the Fe-saponite and magnetite detected in a mudstone in the Yellowknife Bay fm near Curiosity's landing site (stratigraphically at the base of the Bradbury group). The occurrence of jarosite and hematite in the lower section indicates an acidic diagenetic event. These phases may have formed via several acidic alteration mechanisms, including (1) oxidative weathering of mafic igneous rocks containing sulfides; (2) sulfuric acid weathering of Fe-bearing phases; and (3) near-neutral pH subsurface solutions rich in Fe2(+) that were rapidly oxidized to Fe3(+), which produced excess acidity. The transition from abundant hematite in the lowermost Murray fm to magnetite moving up section may indicate changes in lake chemistry, i.e., variable redox conditions, possibly during authigenesis or subsequent diagenetic events. Tridymite, a high temperature mineral, (and possibly cristobalite) is detrital, potentially deposited in a lake from a distal silicic volcanic rock source or from crustal materials present prior to the Gale Crater impact event. Abundant Si-rich XRD amorphous materials in the upper sections of the Murray fm may be detrital or an aqueous alteration product of primary igneous phases and phyllosilicates. Curiosity's science team is still deciphering the authigenesis and diagenetic events that formed the Murray fm. The mineralogy and geochemistry of the formation suggest a complicated history with several (many?) episodes of aqueous alteration under a variety of environmental conditions.
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- 2016
29. Reactions Involving Calcium and Magnesium Sulfates as Potential Sources of Sulfur Dioxide During MSL SAM Evolved Gas Analyses
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McAdam, A. C, Knudson, C. A, Sutter, B, Franz, H. B, Archer, P. D., Jr, Eigenbrode, J. L, Ming, D. W, Morris, R. V, Hurowitz, J. A, Mahaffy, P. R, and Navarro-Gonzalez, R
- Subjects
Lunar And Planetary Science And Exploration - Abstract
The Sample Analysis at Mars (SAM) and Chemistry and Mineralogy (CheMin) instruments on the Mars Science Laboratory (MSL) have analyzed several subsamples of <150 micron fines from ten sites at Gale Crater. Three were in Yellowknife Bay: the Rocknest aeolian bedform (RN) and drilled Sheepbed mudstone from sites John Klein (JK) and Cumberland (CB). One was drilled from the Windjana (WJ) site on a sandstone of the Kimberly formation. Four were drilled from sites Confidence Hills (CH), Mojave (MJ), Telegraph Peak (TP) and Buckskin (BK) of the Murray Formation at the base of Mt. Sharp. Two were drilled from sandstones of the Stimson formation targeting relatively unaltered (Big Sky, BY) and then altered (Greenhorn, GH) material associated with a light colored fracture zone. CheMin analyses provided quantitative sample mineralogy. SAM's evolved gas analysis mass spectrometry (EGA-MS) detected H2O, CO2, O2, H2, SO2, H2S, HCl, NO, and other trace gases. This contribution will focus on evolved SO2. All samples evolved SO2 above 500 C. The shapes of the SO2 evolution traces with temperature vary between samples but most have at least two "peaks' within the wide high temperature evolution, from approx. 500-700 and approx. 700-860 C (Fig. 1). In many cases, the only sulfur minerals detected with CheMin were Ca sulfates (e.g., RN and GH), which should thermally decompose at temperatures above those obtainable by SAM (>860 C). Sulfides or Fe sulfates were detected by CheMin (e.g., CB, MJ, BK) and could contribute to the high temperature SO2 evolution, but in most cases they are not present in enough abundance to account for all of the SO2. This additional SO2 could be largely associated with x-ray amorphous material, which comprises a significant portion of all samples. It can also be attributed to trace S phases present below the CheMin detection limit, or to reactions which lower the temperatures of SO2 evolution from sulfates that are typically expected to thermally decompose at temperatures outside the SAM temperature range (e.g., Ca and Mg sulfates). Here we discuss the results of SAM-like laboratory analyses targeted at understanding this last possibility, focused on understanding if reactions of HCl or an HCl evolving phase (oxychlorine phases, chlorides, etc.) and Ca and Mg sulfates can result in SO2 evolution in the SAM temperature range.
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- 2016
30. MARTIAN GEOLOGY: Deposition, exhumation, and paleoclimate of an ancient lake deposit, Gale crater, Mars
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Grotzinger, J. P., Gupta, S., Malin, M. C., Rubin, D. M., Schieber, J., Siebach, K., Sumner, D. Y., Stack, K. M., Vasavada, A. R., Arvidson, R. E., III, Calef F., Edgar, L., Fischer, W. F., Grant, J. A., Griffes, J., Kah, L. C., Lamb, M. P., Lewis, K. W., Mangold, N., Minitti, M. E., Palucis, M., Rice, M., Williams, R. M. E., Yingst, R. A., Blake, D., Blaney, D., Conrad, P., Crisp, J., Dietrich, W. E., Dromart, G., Edgett, K. S., Ewing, R. C., Gellert, R., Hurowitz, J. A., Kocurek, G., Mahaffy, P., McBride, M. J., McLennan, S. M., Mischna, M., Ming, D., Milliken, R., Newsom, H., Oehler, D., Parker, T. J., Vaniman, D., Wiens, R. C., and Wilson, S. A.
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- 2015
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31. Oxidation Of Manganese At Kimberley, Gale Crater: More Free Oxygen In Mars' Past?
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Lanza, N. L, Wiens, R. C, Arvidson, R. E, Clark, B. C, Fischer, W. W, Gellert, R, Grotzinger, J. P, Hurowitz, J. A, McLennan, S. M, Morris, R. V, Rice, M. S, Bell, J. F., III, Berger, J. A, Blaney, D. L, Bridges, N. T, Calef, F., III, Campbell, J. L, Clegg, S. M, Cousin, A, Edgett, K. S, Fabre, C, Fisk, M. R, Forni, O, Frydenvang, J, and Ming, D. W
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Chemistry And Materials (General) ,Lunar And Planetary Science And Exploration - Abstract
High Mn concentrations provide unique indicators of water-rich environments and their redox state. Very high-potential oxidants are required to oxidize Mn to insoluble, high-valence oxides that can precipitate and concentrate Mn in rocks and sediments; these redox potentials are much higher than those needed to oxidize Fe or S. Consequently, Mn-rich rocks on Earth closely track the rise of atmospheric oxygen. Given the association between Mn-rich rocks and the redox state of surface environments, observations of anomalous Mn enrichments on Mars raise similar questions about redox history, solubility and aqueous transport, and availability as a metabolic substrate. Our observations suggest that at least some of the high Mn present in Gale crater occurs in the form of Mn-oxides filling veins that crosscut sand-stones, requiring post-depositional precipitation as highly oxidizing fluids moved through the fractured strata after their deposition and lithification.
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- 2015
32. Constraining the Texture and Composition of Pore-Filling Cements at Gale Crater, Mars
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Siebach, K. L, Grotzinger, J. P, McLennan, S. M, Hurowitz, J. A, Ming, D. W, Vaniman, D. T, Rampe, E. B, Blaney, D. L, and Kah, L. C
- Subjects
Lunar And Planetary Science And Exploration ,Chemistry And Materials (General) - Abstract
The Mars Science Laboratory (MSL) rover Curiosity has encountered a wide variety of sedimentary rocks deposited in fluvio-lacuestrine sequences at the base of Gale Crater. The presence of sedimentary rocks requires that initial sediments underwent diagenesis and were lithified. Lithification involves sediment compaction, cementation, and re-crystallization (or authigenic) processes. Analysis of the texture and composition of the cement can reveal the environmental conditions when the cements were deposited, enabling better understanding of early environments present within Gale Crater. The first step in lithification is sediment compaction. The Gale crater sediments do not show evidence for extensive compaction prior to cementation; the Sheepbed mudstone in Yellowknife Bay (YKB) has preserved void spaces ("hollow nodules"), indicating that sediments were cemented around the hollow prior to compaction, and conglomerates show imbrication, indicating minimal grain reorganization prior to lithification. Furthermore, assuming the maximum burial depth of these sediments is equivalent to the depth of Gale Crater, the sediments were never under more than 1 kb of pressure, and assuming a 15 C/km thermal gradient in the late Noachian, the maximum temperature of diagenesis would have been approximately 75 C. This is comparable to shallow burial diagenetic conditions on Earth. The cementation and recrystallization components of lithification are closely intertwined. Cementation describes the precipitation of minerals between grains from pore fluids, and recrystallization (or authigenesis) is when the original sedimentary mineral grains are altered into secondary minerals. The presence of authigenic smectites and magnetite in the YKB formation suggests that some recrystallization has taken place. The relatively high percentage of XRD-amorphous material (25-40%) detected by CheMin suggests that this recrystallization may be limited in scope, and therefore may not contribute significantly to the cementing material. However, relatively persistent amorphous components could exist in the Martian environment (e.g. amorphous MgSO4), so recrystallization, including loss of crystallinity, cannot yet be excluded as a method of cementation. In order to describe the rock cementation, both the rock textures and their composition must be considered. Here, we attempt to summarize the current understanding of the textural and compositional aspects of the cement across the rocks analyzed by Curiosity to this point.
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- 2015
33. Mars2020 In Situ Investigation of Alteration at Jezero Crater
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Brown, A. J., Wiens, Roger C., Maurice, Sylvestre, Uckert, K., Tice, M., Flannery, David, Deen, Robert G., Tarnas, J. D., Treiman, A. H., Siebach, Kirsten L., Beegle, Luther W., Abbey, W. J., Bell, James F., Johnson, J. R., Mayhew, Lisa E., Simon, Justin I., Hurowitz, J. A., Beyssac, Olivier, Willis, P. A., Bhartia, R., Smith, Rebecca J., Fouchet, Thierry, Quantin-Nataf, C., Brown, A. J., Wiens, Roger C., Maurice, Sylvestre, Uckert, K., Tice, M., Flannery, David, Deen, Robert G., Tarnas, J. D., Treiman, A. H., Siebach, Kirsten L., Beegle, Luther W., Abbey, W. J., Bell, James F., Johnson, J. R., Mayhew, Lisa E., Simon, Justin I., Hurowitz, J. A., Beyssac, Olivier, Willis, P. A., Bhartia, R., Smith, Rebecca J., Fouchet, Thierry, and Quantin-Nataf, C.
- Abstract
We report on a team effort to utilize the M2020 instrument suite to assess the mineralogy of the units we encounter at Jezero. Here, we focus on the possibility of testing orbital observations and hypotheses regarding the olivine-carbonate lithology.
- Published
- 2021
34. Collecting Samples in Gale Crater, Mars; an Overview of the Mars Science Laboratory Sample Acquisition, Sample Processing and Handling System
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Anderson, R. C., Jandura, L., Okon, A. B., Sunshine, D., Roumeliotis, C., Beegle, L. W., Hurowitz, J., Kennedy, B., Limonadi, D., McCloskey, S., Robinson, M., Seybold, C., and Brown, K.
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- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Volatile and Organic Compositions of Sedimentary Rocks in Yellowknife Bay, Gale Crater, Mars
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Ming, D. W., Archer, P. D., Jr., Glavin, D. P., Eigenbrode, J. L., Franz, H. B., Sutter, B., Brunner, A. E., Stern, J. C., Freissinet, C., McAdam, A. C., Mahaffy, P. R., Cabane, M., Coll, P., Campbell, J. L., Atreya, S. K., Niles, P. B., Bell, J. F., III, Bish, D. L., Brinckerhoff, W. B., Buch, A., Conrad, P. G., Des Marais, D. J., Ehlmann, B. L., Fairén, A. G., Farley, K., Flesch, G. J., Francois, P., Gellert, R., Grant, J. A., Grotzinger, J. P., Gupta, S., Herkenhoff, K. E., Hurowitz, J. A., Leshin, L. A., Lewis, K. W., McLennan, S. M., Miller, K. E., Moersch, J., Morris, R. V., Navarro-González, R., Pavlov, A. A., Perrett, G. M., Pradler, I., Squyres, S. W., Summons, R. E., Steele, A., Stolper, E. M., Sumner, D. Y., Szopa, C., Teinturier, S., Trainer, M. G., Treiman, A. H., Vaniman, D. T., Vasavada, A. R., Webster, C. R., Wray, J. J., and Yingst, R. A.
- Published
- 2014
36. In Situ Radiometric and Exposure Age Dating of the Martian Surface
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Farley, K. A., Malespin, C., Mahaffy, P., Grotzinger, J. P., Vasconcelos, P. M., Milliken, R. E., Malin, M., Edgett, K. S., Pavlov, A. A., Hurowitz, J. A., Grant, J. A., Miller, H. B., Arvidson, R., Beegle, L., Calef, F., Conrad, P. G., Dietrich, W. E., Eigenbrode, J., Gellert, R., Gupta, S., Hamilton, V., Hassler, D. M., Lewis, K. W., McLennan, S. M., Ming, D., Navarro-González, R., Schwenzer, S. P., Steele, A., Stolper, E. M., Sumner, D. Y., Vaniman, D., Vasavada, A., Williford, K., and Wimmer-Schweingruber, R. F.
- Published
- 2014
37. Elemental Geochemistry of Sedimentary Rocks at Yellowknife Bay, Gale Crater, Mars
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McLennan, S. M., Anderson, R. B., Bell, J. F., III, Bridges, J. C., Calef, F., III, Campbell, J. L., Clark, B. C., Clegg, S., Conrad, P., Cousin, A., Des Marais, D. J., Dromart, G., Dyar, M. D., Edgar, L. A., Ehlmann, B. L., Fabre, C., Forni, O., Gasnault, O., Gellert, R., Gordon, S., Grant, J. A., Grotzinger, J. P., Gupta, S., Herkenhoff, K. E., Hurowitz, J. A., King, P. L., Le Mouélic, S., Leshin, L. A., Léveillé, R., Lewis, K. W., Mangold, N., Maurice, S., Ming, D. W., Morris, R. V., Nachon, M., Newsom, H. E., Ollila, A. M., Perrett, G. M., Rice, M. S., Schmidt, M. E., Schwenzer, S. P., Stack, K., Stolper, E. M., Sumner, D. Y., Treiman, A. H., VanBommel, S., Vaniman, D. T., Vasavada, A., Wiens, R. C., and Yingst, R. A.
- Published
- 2014
38. Mineralogy of a Mudstone at Yellowknife Bay, Gale Crater, Mars
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Vaniman, D. T., Bish, D. L., Ming, D. W., Bristow, T. F., Morris, R. V., Blake, D. F., Chipera, S. J., Morrison, S. M., Treiman, A. H., Rampe, E. B., Rice, M., Achilles, C. N., Grotzinger, J. P., McLennan, S. M., Williams, J., Bell, J. F., III, Newsom, H. E., Downs, R. T., Maurice, S., Sarrazin, P., Yen, A. S., Morookian, J. M., Farmer, J. D., Stack, K., Milliken, R. E., Ehlmann, B. L., Sumner, D. Y., Berger, G., Crisp, J. A., Hurowitz, J. A., Anderson, R., Des Marais, D. J., Stolper, E. M., Edgett, K. S., Gupta, S., and Spanovich, N.
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- 2014
39. A Habitable Fluvio-Lacustrine Environment at Yellowknife Bay, Gale Crater, Mars
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Grotzinger, J. P, Sumner, D. Y, Kah, L. C, Stack, K, Gupta, S, Edgar, L, Rubin, D, Lewis, K, Schieber, J, Mangold, N, Milliken, R, Conrad, P. G, DesMarais, D, Farmer, J, Siebach, K, Calef, F., III, Hurowitz, J, McLennan, S. M, Ming, D, Vaniman, D, Crisp, J, Vasavada, A, Edgett, K. S, Malin, M, Blake, D, Gellert, R, Mahaffy, P, Wiens, R. C, Maurice, S, Grant, J. A, Wilson, S, Anderson, R. C, Beegle, L, Arvidson, R, Hallet, B, Bristow, T. F, Eigenbrode, J, and Meyer, M
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Lunar And Planetary Science And Exploration ,Exobiology - Abstract
The Curiosity rover discovered fine-grained sedimentary rocks, which are inferred to represent an ancient lake and preserve evidence of an environment that would have been suited to support a martian biosphere founded on chemolithoautotrophy. This aqueous environment was characterized by neutral pH, low salinity, and variable redox states of both iron and sulfur species. Carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, sulfur, nitrogen, and phosphorus were measured directly as key biogenic elements; by inference, phosphorus is assumed to have been available. The environment probably had a minimum duration of hundreds to tens of thousands of years. These results highlight the biological viability of fluvial-lacustrine environments in the post-Noachian history of Mars.
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- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Collecting Samples in Gale Crater, Mars; an Overview of the Mars Science Laboratory Sample Acquisition, Sample Processing and Handling System
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Anderson, R. C., primary, Jandura, L., additional, Okon, A. B., additional, Sunshine, D., additional, Roumeliotis, C., additional, Beegle, L. W., additional, Hurowitz, J., additional, Kennedy, B., additional, Limonadi, D., additional, McCloskey, S., additional, Robinson, M., additional, Seybold, C., additional, and Brown, K., additional
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Mars Hand Lens Imager (MAHLI) efforts and observations at the “Rocknest' Eolian sand shadow in Curiosity’s Gale Crater field site
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Harker, D. E, Herkenhoff, K. E, Herrera, P. N, Hurowitz, J. A, Jandura, L, Krezoski, G. M, Lewis, K. W, Madsen, M. B, Maki, J. N, Malin, M. C, Ming, D. W, Nixon, B. E, Olson, T. S, Pariser, O, Posiolova, L. V, Ravine, M. A, Robinson, M. L, Roumeliotis, C, Rowland, S. K, Rubin, D. M, Ruoff, N. A, Seybold, C. C, Schieber, J, Schmidt, M. E, Sengstacken, A. J, Simmonds, J. J, Sullivan, R. J, Tompkins, V. V, Van Beek, T. L, Edgett, K. S, Yingst, R. A, Minitti, M. E, Goetz, W, Kah, L. C, Kennedy, M. R, Lipkaman, L. J, Jensen, E. H, Anderson, R. C, Beegle, L. W, Carsten, J. L, Cooper, B, Deen, R. G, Dromart, G, Eigenbrode, J. L, Grotzinger, J. P, Grupta, S, Hamilton, V. E, and Hardgrove, C. J
- Abstract
The Mars Science Laboratory (MSL) mission is focused on assessing the past or present habitability of Mars, through interrogation of environment and environmental records at the Curiosity rover field site in Gale crater. The MSL team has two methods available to collect, process and deliver samples to onboard analytical laboratories, the Chemistry and Mineralogy instrument (CheMin) and the Sample Analysis at Mars (SAM) instrument suite. One approach obtains samples by drilling into a rock, the other uses a scoop to collect loose regolith fines.
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- 2013
42. Mars Hand Lens Imager (MAHLI) efforts and observations at the “Rocknest' Eolian sand shadow in Curiosity’s Gale Crater field site
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Edgett, K. S, Yingst, R. A, Minitti, M. E, Goetz, W, Kah, L. C, Kennedy, M. R, Lipkaman, L. J, Jensen, E. H, Anderson, R. C, Beegle, L. W, Carsten, J. L, Cooper, B, Deen, R. G, Dromart, G, Eigenbrode, J. L, Grotzinger, J. P, Grupta, S, Hamilton, V. E, Hardgrove, C. J, Harker, D. E, Herkenhoff, K. E, Herrera, P. N, Hurowitz, J. A, Jandura, L, Krezoski, G. M, Lewis, K. W, Madsen, M. B, Maki, J. N, Malin, M. C, Ming, D. W, Nixon, B. E, Olson, T. S, Pariser, O, Posiolova, L. V, Ravine, M. A, Robinson, M. L, Roumeliotis, C, Rowland, S. K, Rubin, D. M, Ruoff, N. A, Seybold, C. C, Schieber, J, Schmidt, M. E, Sengstacken, A. J, Simmonds, J. J, Sullivan, R. J, Tompkins, V. V, and Van Beek, T. L
- Published
- 2013
43. Fluorocarbon Contamination from the Drill on the Mars Science Laboratory: Potential Science Impact on Detecting Martian Organics by Sample Analysis at Mars (SAM)
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Eigenbrode, J. L, McAdam, A, Franz, H, Freissinet, C, Bower, H, Floyd, M, Conrad, P, Mahaffy, P, Feldman, J, Hurowitz, J, Evans, J, Anderson, M, Jandura, L, Brown, K, Logan, C, Kuhn, S, Anderson, R, Beegle, L, Limonadi, D, Rainen, R, and Umland, J
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Lunar And Planetary Science And Exploration - Abstract
Polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE or trade name: Teflon by Dupont Co.) has been detected in rocks drilled during terrestrial testing of the Mars Science Laboratory (MSL) drilling hardware. The PTFE in sediments is a wear product of the seals used in the Drill Bit Assemblies (DBAs). It is expected that the drill assembly on the MSL flight model will also shed Teflon particles into drilled samples. One of the primary goals of the Sample Analysis at Mars (SAM) instrument suite on MSL is to test for the presence of martian organics in samples. Complications introduced by the potential presence of PTFE in drilled samples to the SAM evolved gas analysis (EGA or pyrolysisquadrupole mass spectrometry, pyr-QMS) and pyrolysis- gas chromatography mass spectrometry (Pyr- GCMS) experiments was investigated.
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- 2013
44. Detection of Organic Constituents Including Chloromethylpropene in the Analyses of the ROCKNEST Drift by Sample Analysis at Mars (SAM)
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Eigenbrode, J. L, Glavin, D, Coll, P, Summons, R. E, Mahaffy, P, Archer, D, Brunner, A, Conrad, P, Freissinet, C, Martin, M, McKay, C, Hurowitz, J, Evans, J, Anderson, M, Jandura, L, Brown, K, Logan C, Kuhn, S, Anderson, R, Beegle, L, Blakkolb, B, Katz, I, Limonadi, D, Rainen, R, and Umland, J
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Geophysics - Abstract
key challenge in assessing the habitability of martian environments is the detection of organic matter - a requirement of all life as we know it. The Curiosity rover, which landed on August 6, 2012 in Gale Crater of Mars, includes the Sample Analysis at Mars (SAM) instrument suite capable of in situ analysis of gaseous organic components thermally evolved from sediment samples collected, sieved, and delivered by the MSL rover. On Sol 94, SAM received its first solid sample: scooped sediment from Rocknest that was sieved to <150 m particle size. Multiple 10-40 mg portions of the scoop #5 sample were delivered to SAM for analyses. Prior to their introduction, a blank (empty cup) analysis was performed. This blank served 1) to clean the analytical instrument of SAMinternal materials that accumulated in the gas processing system since integration into the rover, and 2) to characterize the background signatures of SAM. Both the blank and the Rocknest samples showed the presence of hydrocarbon components.
- Published
- 2013
45. APXS of First Rocks Encountered by Curiosity in Gale Crater: Geochemical Diversity and Volatile Element (K and ZN) Enrichment
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Schmidt, M. E, King, P. L, Gellert, R, Elliott, B, Thompson, L, Berger, J, Bridges, J, Campbell, J. L, Grotzinger, J, Hurowitz, J, Leshin, L, Lewis, K. W, McLennan, S. M, Ming, D. W, Perrett, G, Pradler, I, Stolper, E. M, Squyres, S. W, and Greiman, A. H
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Lunar And Planetary Science And Exploration - Abstract
The Alpha Particle X-ray spectrometer (APXS) on the Curiosity rover in Gale Crater [1] is the 4th such instrument to have landed on Mars [2]. Along the rover's traverse down-section toward Glenelg (through sol 102), the APXS has examined four rocks and one soil [3]. Gale rocks are geochemically diverse and expand the range of Martian rock compositions to include high volatile and alkali contents (up to 3.0 wt% K2O) with high Fe and Mn (up to 29.2% FeO*).
- Published
- 2013
46. Using the Abitibi Greenstone Belt to Understand Martian Hydrothermal Systems and the Potential for Biosignature Preservation in High Temperature Aqueous Environments
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Hurowitz, J, Abelson, J, Allwood, A, Anderson, R, Atkinson, B, Beaty, D, Bristow, T, Ehlmann, B, Eigenbrode, J, Grotzinger, J, Hand, K, Halevy, I, Knoll, A, McCleese, D, Milliken, R, Russell, M, Stolper, D, Stolper, E, and Tosca, N
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Aerospace Medicine - Abstract
Metabolic bone diseases like osteoporosis result from the disruption of normal bone mineral balance (BMB) resulting in bone loss. During spaceflight astronauts lose substantial bone. Bed rest provides an analog to simulate some of the effects of spaceflight; including bone and calcium loss and provides the opportunity to evaluate new methods to monitor BMB in healthy individuals undergoing environmentally induced-bone loss. Previous research showed that natural variations in the Ca isotope ratio occur because bone formation depletes soft tissue of light Ca isotopes while bone resorption releases that isotopically light Ca back into soft tissue (Skulan et al, 2007). Using a bed rest model, we demonstrate that the Ca isotope ratio of urine shifts in a direction consistent with bone loss after just 7 days of bed rest, long before detectable changes in bone mineral density (BMD) occur. The Ca isotope variations tracks changes observed in urinary N-teleopeptide, a bone resorption biomarker. Bone specific alkaline phosphatase, a bone formation biomarker, is unchanged. The established relationship between Ca isotopes and BMB can be used to quantitatively translate the changes in the Ca isotope ratio to changes in BMD using a simple mathematical model. This model predicts that subjects lost 0.25 +/- 0.07% (+/- SD) of their bone mass from day 7 to day 30 of bed rest. Given the rapid signal observed using Ca isotope measurements and the potential to quantitatively assess bone loss; this technique is well suited to study the short-term dynamics of bone metabolism.
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- 2011
47. In-Situ and Experimental Evidence for Acidic Weathering of Rocks and Soils on Mars
- Author
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Hurowitz, J. A, McLennan, S. M, Tosca, N. J, Arvidson, R. E, Michalski, J. R, Ming, D, Schroeder, C, and Squyres, S. W
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Geosciences (General) - Abstract
Experimental data for alteration of synthetic Martian basalts at pH=0-1 indicate that chemical fractionations at low pH are vastly different from those observed during terrestrial weathering. Rock analyses from Gusev crater are well described by the relationships apparent from low pH experimental alteration data. A model for rock surface alteration is developed which indicates that a leached alteration zone is present on rock surfaces at Gusev. This zone is not chemically fractionated to a large degree from the underlying rock interior, indicating that the rock surface alteration process has occurred at low fluid-to-rock ratio. The geochemistry of natural rock surfaces analyzed by APXS is consistent with a mixture between adhering soil/dust and the leached alteration zone. The chemistry of rock surfaces analyzed after brushing with the RAT is largely representative of the leached alteration zone. The chemistry of rock surfaces analyzed after grinding with the RAT is largely representative of the interior of the rock, relatively unaffected by the alteration process occurring at the rock surface. Elemental measurements from the Spirit, Opportunity, Pathfinder and Viking 1 landing sites indicate that soil chemistry from widely separated locations is consistent with the low-pH, low fluid to rock ratio alteration relationships developed for Gusev rocks. Soils are affected principally by mobility of FeO and MgO, consistent with alteration of olivine-bearing basalt and subsequent precipitation of FeO and MgO bearing secondary minerals as the primary control on soil geochemistry.
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- 2006
48. Sulfate Deposition in Regolith Exposed in Trenches on the Plains Between the Spirit Landing Site and Columbia Hills in Gusev Crater, Mars
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Wang, Alian, Haskin, L. A, Squyres, S. W, Arvidson, R, Crumpler, L, Gellert, R, Hurowitz, J, Schroeder, C, Tosca, N, and Herkenhoff, K
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Lunar And Planetary Science And Exploration - Abstract
During its exploration within Gusev crater between sol 01 and sol 158, the Spirit rover dug three trenches (Fig. 1) to expose the subsurface regolith [1, 2, 9]. Laguna trench (approx. 6 cm deep, approx.203 m from the rim of Bonneville crater) was dug in Laguna Hollow at the boundary of the impact ejecta from Bonneville crater and the surrounding plains. The Big Hole trench (approx. 6-7 cm deep) and The Boroughs trench (approx. 11 cm deep) were dug in the plains between the Bonneville crater and the Columbia Hills (approx.556 m and approx.1698 m from the rim of Bonneville crater respectively). The top, wall and floor regolith of the three trenches were investigated using the entire set of Athena scientific instruments [10].
- Published
- 2005
49. Diagenetic silica enrichment and late-stage groundwater activity in Gale crater, Mars: Silica Enriching Diagenesis, Gale, Mars
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Frydenvang, J., Gasda, P. J., Hurowitz, J. A., Grotzinger, J. P., Wiens, R. C., Newsom, H. E., Edgett, K. S., Watkins, J., Bridges, J. C., Maurice, S., Fisk, M. R., Johnson, J. R., Rapin, W., Stein, N. T., Clegg, S. M., Schwenzer, S. P., Bedford, C. C., Edwards, P., Mangold, N., Cousin, A., Anderson, R. B., Payré, V., Vaniman, D., Blake, D. F., Lanza, N. L., Gupta, S., Van Beek, J., Sautter, V., Meslin, P.-Y., Rice, M., Milliken, R., Gellert, R., Thompson, L., Clark, B. C., Sumner, D. Y., Fraeman, A. A., Kinch, K. M., Madsen, M. B., Mitrofanov, I. G., Jun, I., Calef, F., and Vasavada, A. R.
- Abstract
Diagenetic silica enrichment in fracture‐associated halos that crosscut lacustrine and unconformably overlying aeolian sedimentary bedrock is observed on the lower north slope of Aeolis Mons in Gale crater, Mars. The diagenetic silica enrichment is colocated with detrital silica enrichment observed in the lacustrine bedrock yet extends into a considerably younger, unconformably draping aeolian sandstone, implying that diagenetic silica enrichment postdates the detrital silica enrichment. A causal connection between the detrital and diagenetic silica enrichment implies that water was present in the subsurface of Gale crater long after deposition of the lacustrine sediments and that it mobilized detrital amorphous silica and precipitated it along fractures in the overlying bedrock. Although absolute timing is uncertain, the observed diagenesis likely represents some of the most recent groundwater activity in Gale crater and suggests that the timescale of potential habitability extended considerably beyond the time that the lacustrine sediments of Aeolis Mons were deposited.
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- 2017
50. Diagenetic silica enrichment and late-stage groundwater activity in Gale crater, Mars
- Author
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Frydenvang, J., Gasada, P. J., Hurowitz, J. A., Grotzinger, J. P, Wiens, R. C., Newsom, H. E., Edgett, K. S., Watkins, J., Bridges, J. C., Maurice, S, Fisk, M. R., Johnson, J. R., Rapin, W., Stein, N. T., Clegg, S. M., Schwenzer, Susanne, Bedford, Candice, Edwards, P., Mangold, N., Cousin, A., Anderson, R. B., Payre, V., Vaniman, D., Blake, D. F., Lanza, N. L., Gupta, S., Van Beek, J., Sautter, V, Meslin, P.-Y., Rice, M., Milliken, R., Gellert, R., Thompson, L., Clark, B. C., Sumner, D. Y., Fraeman, A. A., Kinch, K. M., Madsen, M. B., Mitrofanov, I. G., Jun, I., Calef, F., Vasavada, A. R., Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL), Faculty of Science [Copenhagen], University of Copenhagen = Københavns Universitet (UCPH), Stony Brook University [SUNY] (SBU), State University of New York (SUNY), Division of Geological and Planetary Sciences [Pasadena], California Institute of Technology (CALTECH), Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences [Albuquerque] (EPS), The University of New Mexico [Albuquerque], Malin Space Science Systems (MSSS), Department of Physics and Astronomy [Leicester], University of Leicester, Institut de recherche en astrophysique et planétologie (IRAP), Université Toulouse III - Paul Sabatier (UT3), Université de Toulouse (UT)-Université de Toulouse (UT)-Institut national des sciences de l'Univers (INSU - CNRS)-Observatoire Midi-Pyrénées (OMP), Institut de Recherche pour le Développement (IRD)-Université Toulouse III - Paul Sabatier (UT3), Université de Toulouse (UT)-Université de Toulouse (UT)-Institut national des sciences de l'Univers (INSU - CNRS)-Centre National d'Études Spatiales [Toulouse] (CNES)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Météo-France -Institut de Recherche pour le Développement (IRD)-Institut national des sciences de l'Univers (INSU - CNRS)-Centre National d'Études Spatiales [Toulouse] (CNES)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Météo-France -Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), College of Earth, Ocean and Atmospheric Sciences [Corvallis] (CEOAS), Oregon State University (OSU), Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory [Laurel, MD] (APL), The Open University Business School [Milton Keynes], The Open University [Milton Keynes] (OU), Laboratoire de Planétologie et Géodynamique [UMR 6112] (LPG), Université d'Angers (UA)-Université de Nantes - UFR des Sciences et des Techniques (UN UFR ST), Université de Nantes (UN)-Université de Nantes (UN)-Institut national des sciences de l'Univers (INSU - CNRS)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), United States Geological Survey (USGS), GeoRessources, Institut national des sciences de l'Univers (INSU - CNRS)-Centre de recherches sur la géologie des matières premières minérales et énergétiques (CREGU)-Université de Lorraine (UL)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Planetary Science Institute [Tucson] (PSI), NASA Ames Research Center (ARC), Department of Earth Science and Engineering [Imperial College London], Imperial College London, Institut de minéralogie, de physique des matériaux et de cosmochimie (IMPMC), Muséum national d'Histoire naturelle (MNHN)-Université Pierre et Marie Curie - Paris 6 (UPMC)-Institut de recherche pour le développement [IRD] : UR206-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Western Washington University (WWU), Department of Geological Sciences [Providence], Brown University, Department of Physics [Guelph], University of Guelph, University of New Brunswick (UNB), Space Science Institute [Boulder] (SSI), Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences [Univ California Davis] (EPS - UC Davis), University of California [Davis] (UC Davis), University of California (UC)-University of California (UC), Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL), NASA-California Institute of Technology (CALTECH), Space Research Institute of the Russian Academy of Sciences (IKI), Russian Academy of Sciences [Moscow] (RAS), NASA MSL, Villum Fonden, Det Frie Forskningsrad (DFF), UKSA, UK Research & Innovation (UKRI)Science & Technology Facilities Council (STFC), and UK Space Agency
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[SDU]Sciences of the Universe [physics] ,Mars ,[SDU.STU]Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences ,Silica ,MSL ,Gale crater ,Groundwater ,Diagenesis - Abstract
International audience; Diagenetic silica enrichment in fracture-associated halos that crosscut lacustrine and unconformably overlying aeolian sedimentary bedrock is observed on the lower north slope of Aeolis Mons in Gale crater, Mars. The diagenetic silica enrichment is colocated with detrital silica enrichment observed in the lacustrine bedrock yet extends into a considerably younger, unconformably draping aeolian sandstone, implying that diagenetic silica enrichment postdates the detrital silica enrichment. A causal connection between the detrital and diagenetic silica enrichment implies that water was present in the subsurface of Gale crater long after deposition of the lacustrine sediments and that it mobilized detrital amorphous silica and precipitated it along fractures in the overlying bedrock. Although absolute timing is uncertain, the observed diagenesis likely represents some of the most recent groundwater activity in Gale crater and suggests that the timescale of potential habitability extended considerably beyond the time that the lacustrine sediments of Aeolis Mons were deposited.
- Published
- 2017
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