At future
Mars landing spot, scientists spy mineral that could preserve signs of ancient
life
Kevin Stacey, Brown University
Jezero crater, where NASA plans to land a new Mars rover
next year, is home to the remains of an ancient river delta. Researchers have
now found deposits of hydrated silica, a mineral that's especially good at
preserving microfossils and other signs of past life, near the delta. NASA/JPL/JHUAPL/MSSS/Brown
University
Next year, NASA plans to launch a
new Mars rover to search for signs of ancient life on the Red Planet. A new
study shows that the rover’s Jezero crater landing site is home to deposits of
hydrated silica, a mineral that just happens to be particularly good at
preserving biosignatures.
“Using a technique we developed that
helps us find rare, hard-to-detect mineral phases in data taken from orbiting
spacecraft, we found two outcrops of hydrated silica within Jezero crater,”
said Jesse Tarnas, a Ph.D. student at Brown University and the study’s lead
author.
“We know from Earth that this
mineral phase is exceptional at preserving microfossils and other
biosignatures, so that makes these outcrops exciting targets for the rover to
explore.”
NASA announced late last year that
its Mars 2020 rover would be headed to Jezero, which appears to have been home
to an ancient lake. The star attraction at Jezero is a large delta deposit
formed by ancient rivers that fed the lake. The delta would have concentrated a
wealth of material from a vast watershed. Deltas on Earth are known to be good
at preserving signs of life.
Adding hydrated silica to the mix at Jezero increases that preservation potential, the researchers say. One of the silica deposits was found on the edge of the delta at low elevation. It’s possible that the minerals formed in place and represent the bottom layer of the delta deposit, which is a great scenario for preserving signs of life.
“The material that forms the bottom
layer of a delta is sometimes the most productive in terms of preserving
biosignatures,” said Jack Mustard, a professor at Brown and study co-author.
“So if you can find that bottomset layer, and that layer has a lot of silica in
it, that’s a double bonus.”
A false-color image of Jezero crater shows the edge of an
ancient river delta, where researchers have spied hydrated silica. Credit: NASA
For the study, researchers used data
from the Compact Reconnaissance Imaging Spectrometer for Mars (CRISM)
instrument that flies aboard NASA’s Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter. The technique
applied to the CRISM data used big data analysis methods to tease out the weak
spectral signature of the silica deposits.
While the geologic context of the deposits
suggests they could have formed at the base of the delta, it’s not the only
possibility, the researchers say. The minerals could have formed upstream in
the watershed that fed Jezero and been washed subsequently into the crater, by
volcanic activity or later episodes of water saturation in the Jezero crater
lake. The rover should be able to isolate the real source, the researchers
say.
“We can get amazing high-resolution
images and compositional data from orbit, but there’s a limit on what we can discern
in terms of how these minerals formed,” Tarnas said. “Given instruments on the
rover, however, we should be able to constrain the origin of these deposits.”
The rover will be able to perform fine-scale chemical analysis of the deposits and provide a close-up view of how the deposits are situated in relation to surrounding rock units. It will also have a sensor similar to CRISM to link orbital and lander data.
That will go a long way to
determining how the deposits formed. What’s more, one instrument aboard the
rover is able to look for complex organic material. If the silica deposits have
high concentrations of organics, it would be an especially intriguing find, the
researchers say.
And in addition to the work the
rover does on site, it will also cache samples to be returned to Earth by
future missions.
“If these deposits present
themselves in the form of rocks that are big and competent enough to drill
into, they could be put into the cache,” Mustard said. “This work suggests that
they’d be a great sample to have.”
The research was funded in part by
the NASA Mars Data Analysis Program (NNX13AK72G).