Welcome to the new version of CaltechAUTHORS. Login is currently restricted to library staff. If you notice any issues, please email coda@library.caltech.edu
Published February 2017 | Published + Supplemental Material
Journal Article Open

Sorting out Compositional Trends in Sedimentary Rocks of the Bradbury Group (Aeolus Palus), Gale Crater, Mars

Abstract

Sedimentary rocks are composed of detrital grains derived from source rocks, which are altered by chemical weathering, sorted during transport, and cemented during diagenesis. Fluvio-lacustrine sedimentary rocks of the Bradbury group, observed on the floor of Gale crater by the Curiosity rover during its first 860 Martian solar days, show trends in bulk chemistry that are consistent with sorting of mineral grains during transport. The Bradbury group rocks are uniquely suited for sedimentary provenance analysis because they appear to have experienced negligible cation loss (i.e., open-system chemical weathering) at the scale of the Alpha Particle X-ray Spectrometer bulk chemistry analyses based on low Chemical Index of Alteration values and successful modeling of >90% of the (volatile-free) targets as mixtures of primary igneous minerals. Significant compositional variability between targets is instead correlated to grain-size and textural characteristics of the rocks; the coarsest-grained targets are enriched in Al_2O_3, SiO_2, and Na_2O, whereas the finer-grained targets are enriched in mafic components. This is consistent with geochemical and mineralogical modeling of the segregation of coarse-grained plagioclase from finer-grained mafic minerals (e.g., olivine and pyroxenes), which would be expected from hydrodynamic sorting of the detritus from mechanical breakdown of subalkaline plagioclase-phyric basalts. While the presence of a distinctive K_2O-rich stratigraphic interval shows that input from at least one distinctive alkali-feldspar-rich protolith contributed to basin fill, the dominant compositional trends in the Bradbury group are consistent with sorting of detrital minerals during transport from relatively homogeneous plagioclase-phyric basalts.

Additional Information

© 2016 American Geophysical Union. Received 10 OCT 2016; Accepted 1 JAN 2017; Accepted article online 5 JAN 2017; Published online 2 FEB 2017. The authors are indebted to the MSL science, engineering, and management teams for their efforts in tactical and strategic operations and in enabling efficient operation of the rover. Without the support of these teams, the data presented here could not have been collected. The authors are also grateful to the science team for the helpful discussions and especially to N. Mangold and M. Schmidt for their helpful feedback on an earlier version of the manuscript. Insightful and constructive reviews by C. Fedo and J. Catalano further improved this manuscript. Some of this research was carried out at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology, under a contract with NASA. The work was also partially supported by the NASA Astrobiology Institute. Data presented in this paper are archived in the Planetary Data System (pds.nasa.gov).

Attached Files

Published - Siebach_et_al-2017-Journal_of_Geophysical_Research__Planets.pdf

Supplemental Material - jgre20623-sup-0001-2016JE005195_S01.pdf

Supplemental Material - jgre20623-sup-0002-2016JE005195_S01.xlsx

Files

Siebach_et_al-2017-Journal_of_Geophysical_Research__Planets.pdf
Files (8.6 MB)
Name Size Download all
md5:dd4194dda13b649f05c8527d363aaf64
7.9 MB Preview Download
md5:98f8ae2a1d4e357e3eec5dcffc7d08dd
155.8 kB Download
md5:ac069ad70beab9bc2495748c430e6d38
530.1 kB Preview Download

Additional details

Created:
August 22, 2023
Modified:
October 24, 2023