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Chemical Evidence for Smectites and Zeolites on Mars: Criteria and LimitationsAqueous alteration on Mars can produce a range of tell-tale secondary minerals [1]. Surface missions typically obtain detailed and highly localized element compositional information, but not always mineralogical information, whereas orbital missions deduce mineralogy from relatively high spatial resolution IR spectral mapping (decameters scale, for CRISM), but obtain element data only over much larger areas of martian terrain (~200 km). Surface missions have also discovered several occurrences of major geochemical alteration of igneous precursors, for many of which elemental compositional is the only diagnostic information available. Many types of clays and zeolites have quasi-unique element profiles which may be used to implicate their presence. In some cases, one or more candidate minerals are sufficiently close in their component elements and their stoichiometry that ambiguity must remain, unless other constraints can be brought to bear. Geochemical characteristics of alteration products most likely on Mars can be compared to results from MER and MSL rover missions (e.g. Independence [4] and Esperance samples). These considerations are needed for MER Opportunity rover now that Mini-TES is no longer operational. It also has importance for exploration by the MSL Curiosity rover because inferences and deductions available from ChemCam (CCAM) remote LIBS and/or in situ x-ray fluorescence (APXS) can be used as indicators for triage to select materials to sample for limited-resource instruments, SAM and Chemin.
Document ID
20140009561
Acquisition Source
Johnson Space Center
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Clark, B. C.
(Space Science Inst. Boulder, CO, United States)
Ming, D.
(NASA Johnson Space Center Houston, TX, United States)
Vaniman, D.
(Planetary Science Inst. Tucson, AZ, United States)
Wiens, R.
(Los Alamos National Lab. NM, United States)
Gellert, R.
(Guelph Univ. Ontario, Canada)
Bridges, J. C.
(Leicester Univ. United Kingdom)
Morris, D.
(NASA Johnson Space Center Houston, TX, United States)
Date Acquired
July 18, 2014
Publication Date
July 14, 2014
Subject Category
Lunar And Planetary Science And Exploration
Report/Patent Number
JSC-CN-31337
Meeting Information
Meeting: International Conference on Mars
Location: Pasadena, CA
Country: United States
Start Date: July 14, 2014
End Date: July 18, 2014
Sponsors: California Inst. of Tech., NASA Headquarters, Lunar and Planetary Inst., Jet Propulsion Lab., California Inst. of Tech.
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Public Use Permitted.
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