Literature DB >> 20624060

Subglacial hydrothermal alteration minerals in Jökulhlaup deposits of Southern Iceland, with implications for detecting past or present habitable environments on Mars.

Nicholas H Warner1, Jack D Farmer.   

Abstract

Jökulhlaups are terrestrial catastrophic outfloods, often triggered by subglacial volcanic eruptions. Similar volcano-ice interactions were likely important on Mars where magma/lava may have interacted with the planet's cryosphere to produce catastrophic floods. As a potential analogue to sediments deposited during martian floods, the Holocene sandurs of Iceland are dominated by basaltic clasts derived from the subglacial environment and deposited during jökulhlaups. Palagonite tuffs and breccias, present within the deposits, represent the primary alteration lithology. The surface abundance of palagonite on the sandurs is 1-20%. X-ray diffraction (XRD) analysis of palagonite breccias confirms a mineral assemblage of zeolites, smectites, low-quartz, and kaolinite. Oriented powder X-ray diffractograms (< 2 microm fraction) for palagonite breccia clasts and coatings reveal randomly ordered smectite, mixed layer smectite/illite, zeolites, and quartz. Visible light-near infrared (VNIR) and shortwave infrared (SWIR) lab spectroscopic data of the same palagonite samples show H2O/OH(-) absorptions associated with clays and zeolites. SWIR spectra derived from Advanced Spaceborne Thermal Emission and Reflection Radiometer (ASTER) images of the sandurs reveal Al-OH(-) and Si-OH(-) absorption features. The identified alteration mineral assemblage is consistent with low temperature (100-140 degrees C) hydrothermal alteration of basaltic material within the subglacial environment. These results suggest that potential martian analog sites that contain a similar suite of hydrated minerals may be indicative of past hydrothermal activity and locations where past habitable environments for microbial life may be found.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20624060     DOI: 10.1089/ast.2009.0425

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Astrobiology        ISSN: 1557-8070            Impact factor:   4.335


  5 in total

1.  Correlations Between Life-Detection Techniques and Implications for Sampling Site Selection in Planetary Analog Missions.

Authors:  Diana M Gentry; Elena S Amador; Morgan L Cable; Nosheen Chaudry; Thomas Cullen; Malene B Jacobsen; Gayathri Murukesan; Edward W Schwieterman; Adam H Stevens; Amanda Stockton; George Tan; Chang Yin; David C Cullen; Wolf Geppert
Journal:  Astrobiology       Date:  2017-10       Impact factor: 4.335

2.  Habitability on Early Mars and the Search for Biosignatures with the ExoMars Rover.

Authors:  Jorge L Vago; Frances Westall; Andrew J Coates; Ralf Jaumann; Oleg Korablev; Valérie Ciarletti; Igor Mitrofanov; Jean-Luc Josset; Maria Cristina De Sanctis; Jean-Pierre Bibring; Fernando Rull; Fred Goesmann; Harald Steininger; Walter Goetz; William Brinckerhoff; Cyril Szopa; François Raulin; Frances Westall; Howell G M Edwards; Lyle G Whyte; Alberto G Fairén; Jean-Pierre Bibring; John Bridges; Ernst Hauber; Gian Gabriele Ori; Stephanie Werner; Damien Loizeau; Ruslan O Kuzmin; Rebecca M E Williams; Jessica Flahaut; François Forget; Jorge L Vago; Daniel Rodionov; Oleg Korablev; Håkan Svedhem; Elliot Sefton-Nash; Gerhard Kminek; Leila Lorenzoni; Luc Joudrier; Viktor Mikhailov; Alexander Zashchirinskiy; Sergei Alexashkin; Fabio Calantropio; Andrea Merlo; Pantelis Poulakis; Olivier Witasse; Olivier Bayle; Silvia Bayón; Uwe Meierhenrich; John Carter; Juan Manuel García-Ruiz; Pietro Baglioni; Albert Haldemann; Andrew J Ball; André Debus; Robert Lindner; Frédéric Haessig; David Monteiro; Roland Trautner; Christoph Voland; Pierre Rebeyre; Duncan Goulty; Frédéric Didot; Stephen Durrant; Eric Zekri; Detlef Koschny; Andrea Toni; Gianfranco Visentin; Martin Zwick; Michel van Winnendael; Martín Azkarate; Christophe Carreau
Journal:  Astrobiology       Date:  2017-07-01       Impact factor: 4.335

3.  Science applications of a multispectral microscopic imager for the astrobiological exploration of Mars.

Authors:  Jorge I Núñez; Jack D Farmer; R Glenn Sellar; Gregg A Swayze; Diana L Blaney
Journal:  Astrobiology       Date:  2014-02       Impact factor: 4.335

Review 4.  Volcanogenic fluvial-lacustrine environments in iceland and their utility for identifying past habitability on Mars.

Authors:  Claire Cousins
Journal:  Life (Basel)       Date:  2015-02-16

5.  Fingerprinting molecular and isotopic biosignatures on different hydrothermal scenarios of Iceland, an acidic and sulfur-rich Mars analog.

Authors:  Laura Sánchez-García; Daniel Carrizo; Antonio Molina; Victoria Muñoz-Iglesias; María Ángeles Lezcano; Maite Fernández-Sampedro; Victor Parro; Olga Prieto-Ballesteros
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2020-12-03       Impact factor: 4.379

  5 in total

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