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Published March 2015 | Published
Journal Article Open

Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter and Opportunity observations of the Burns formation: Crater hopping at Meridiani Planum

Abstract

Compact Reconnaissance Imaging Spectrometer for Mars hyperspectral (1.0–2.65 µm) along-track oversampled observations covering Victoria, Santa Maria, Endeavour, and Ada craters were processed to 6 m/pixel and used in combination with Opportunity observations to detect and map hydrated Mg and Ca sulfate minerals in the Burns formation. The strongest spectral absorption features were found to be associated with outcrops that are relatively young and fresh (Ada) or preferentially scoured of dust, soil, and coatings by prevailing winds. At Victoria and Santa Maria, the scoured areas are on the southeastern rims and walls, opposite to the sides where wind-blown sands extend out of the craters. At Endeavour, the deepest absorptions are in Botany Bay, a subdued and buried rim segment that exhibits high thermal inertias, extensive outcrops, and is interpreted to be a region of enhanced wind scour extending up and out of the crater. Ada, Victoria, and Santa Maria outcrops expose the upper portion of the preserved Burns formation and show spectral evidence for the presence of kieserite. In contrast, gypsum is pervasive spectrally in the Botany Bay exposures. Gypsum, a relatively insoluble evaporative mineral, is interpreted to have formed close to the contact with the Noachian crust as rising groundwaters brought brines close to and onto the surface, either as a direct precipitate or during later diagenesis. The presence of kieserite at the top of the section is hypothesized to reflect precipitation from evaporatively concentrated brines or dehydration of polyhydrated sulfates, in both scenarios as the aqueous environment evolved to very arid conditions.

Additional Information

© 2015 American Geophysical Union. Received 1 JUL 2014; Accepted 4 FEB 2015; Accepted article online 9 FEB 2015; Published online 18 MAR 2015. We thank the capable team of engineers and scientists at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory and elsewhere who made the Opportunity mission possible, together with the project personnel and scientists associated with the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter and Mars Odyssey Missions. A particular thank you is extended to the CRISM Science Operations Center personnel at the Applied Physics Laboratory (APL), Johns Hopkins University. This work was supported in part by contracts to Washington University in Saint Louis from APL and Cornell University. Data are available from the NASA Planetary Data System (https://pds.jpl.nasa.gov/).

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