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The Argyre Region as a Prime Target forin situAstrobiological Exploration of Mars

Authors :
Victor R. Baker
H. James Cleaves
Richard J. Soare
Esther R. Uceda
James M. Dohm
Stuart J. Robbins
Jianguo Yan
Dorothy Z. Oehler
Dirk Schulze-Makuch
Goro Komatsu
Wolfgang Fink
J. Alexis P. Rodriguez
Elhoucine Essefi
Alberto G. Fairén
Shigenori Maruyama
Hideaki Miyamoto
Jeffrey S. Kargel
Maria E. Banks
Source :
Astrobiology. 16:143-158
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
Mary Ann Liebert Inc, 2016.

Abstract

At the time before ∼3.5 Ga that life originated and began to spread on Earth, Mars was a wetter and more geologically dynamic planet than it is today. The Argyre basin, in the southern cratered highlands of Mars, formed from a giant impact at ∼3.93 Ga, which generated an enormous basin approximately 1800 km in diameter. The early post-impact environment of the Argyre basin possibly contained many of the ingredients that are thought to be necessary for life: abundant and long-lived liquid water, biogenic elements, and energy sources, all of which would have supported a regional environment favorable for the origin and the persistence of life. We discuss the astrobiological significance of some landscape features and terrain types in the Argyre region that are promising and accessible sites for astrobiological exploration. These include (i) deposits related to the hydrothermal activity associated with the Argyre impact event, subsequent impacts, and those associated with the migration of heated water along Argyre-induced basement structures; (ii) constructs along the floor of the basin that could mark venting of volatiles, possibly related to the development of mud volcanoes; (iii) features interpreted as ice-cored mounds (open-system pingos), whose origin and development could be the result of deeply seated groundwater upwelling to the surface; (iv) sedimentary deposits related to the formation of glaciers along the basin's margins, such as evidenced by the ridges interpreted to be eskers on the basin floor; (v) sedimentary deposits related to the formation of lakes in both the primary Argyre basin and other smaller impact-derived basins along the margin, including those in the highly degraded rim materials; and (vi) crater-wall gullies, whose morphology points to a structural origin and discharge of (wet) flows.

Details

ISSN :
15578070 and 15311074
Volume :
16
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Astrobiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1982ea8b9c83db094981f5ff4bc2410b
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1089/ast.2015.1396