Publication | Open Access
Aqueous alteration of the Vastitas Borealis Formation at the Tianwen-1 landing site
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Citations
58
References
2022
Year
EngineeringAncient Martian OceanGeomorphologyTectonic EvolutionIndia-asia CollisionSoil MineralogyEarth ScienceGeographyGeologySedimentologyAqueous AlterationTectonicsVastitas Borealis FormationTianwen-1 Landing SiteGeochemistryOrogenyOutflow Channel DepositsAuthigenic Mineral FormationPlanetary GeomorphologyMineral Geochemistry
Abstract The Vastitas Borealis Formation is a Hesperian-aged sedimentary unit that mainly covers the Martian northern plains. Its environment of formation is uncertain but may be related to an ancient Martian ocean, outflow channel deposits, compaction and drainage activities, or subsurface ice-related processes. Here we investigate the geological evolution of the Vastitas Borealis Formation using geochemical and mineralogical data acquired by the Mars Surface Composition Detector on board the Zhurong rover at the Tianwen-1 landing site. We find that the fine-grained soil is very similar to the ubiquitous surface dust at other landing sites on Mars but mixed with calcium-rich and magnesium-poor local materials. These materials are mostly igneous minerals mixed with allophane and imogolite/opal and appear to have a low degree of chemical alteration. We suggest that these deposits likely formed by alteration of extensive volcaniclastic soils in limited or ephemeral water under cold conditions, which largely supports the hypotheses of a frozen ocean and sublimation.
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