11 research outputs found

    Timings of early crustal activity in southern highlands of Mars: Periods of crustal stretching and shortening

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    Extensional and compressional structures are globally abundant on Mars. Distribution of these structures and their ages constrain the crustal stress state and tectonic evolution of the planet. Here in this paper, we report on our investigation over the distribution of the tectonic structures and timings of the associated stress fields from the Noachis-Sabaea region. Thereafter, we hypothesize possible origins in relation to the internal/external processes through detailed morphostructural mapping. In doing so, we have extracted the absolute model ages of these linear tectonic structures using crater size-frequency distribution measurements, buffered crater counting in particular. The estimated ages indicate that the tectonic structures are younger than the mega impacts events (especially Hellas) and instead they reveal two dominant phases of interior dynamics prevailing on the southern highlands, firstly the extensional phase terminating around 3.8 Ga forming grabens and then compressional phase around 3.5–3.6 Ga producing wrinkle ridges and lobate scarps. These derived absolute model ages of the grabens exhibit the age ca. 100 Ma younger than the previously documented end of the global extensional phase. The following compressional activity corresponds to the peak of global contraction period in Early Hesperian. Therefore, we conclude that the planet wide heat loss mechanism, involving crustal stretching coupled with gravitationally driven relaxation (i.e., lithospheric mobility) resulted in the extensional structures around Late Noachian (around 3.8 Ga). Lately cooling related global contraction generated compressional stress ensuing shortening of the upper crust of the southern highlands at the Early Hesperian period (around 3.5–3.6 Ga). Keywords: Martian dynamics, Southern highlands, Extensional tectonics, Compressional tectonics, Age of structures, Buffer crater countin

    Mid‐Infrared Spectroscopy of Feldspars From the BĂŒhl Basalt (Northern Hesse, Germany) Formed Under Reducing Conditions as Terrestrial Analogue of Mercury for MERTIS

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    AbstractThe MErcury Radiometer and Thermal Infrared Spectrometer instrument onboard the BepiColombo spacecraft is designed to investigate Mercury’s surface in the mid‐infrared (mid‐IR). Based on MESSENGER data and modeling, Mercury is thought to be evolved under highly reducing conditions (e.g., McCubbin et al., 2017, https://doi.org/10.1002/2017JE005367; Namur & Charlier, 2017, https://doi.org/10.1038/ngeo2860). The modeling also indicates that Mercury's surface is rich in feldspar. However, it is unknown if reducing conditions during the emplacement of volcanic melts have an influence on the IR properties of feldspars. Therefore, we investigated basaltic samples from the BĂŒhl quarry in northern Hesse, Germany, that evolved under reducing conditions in the mid‐IR and compared the spectra with samples that experienced more oxidizing conditions during their formation. The BĂŒhl samples are feldspar‐rich and contain metallic iron in some areas. Our investigations show that there are no differences between feldspars that formed under different oxidizing conditions. All spectral properties could be explained by well‐known factors that affect mid‐IR spectra of silicates.Plain Language Summary: ESA's and Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency’s spacecraft BepiColombo is equipped, beside other instruments, with a thermal infrared (IR) radiometer and spectrometer called MErcury Radiometer and Thermal Infrared Spectrometer (MERTIS). For the accurate interpretation of the data from the MERTIS instrument, laboratory analog material is necessary. This analog material must fulfill different characteristics, such as different chemical and mineralogical compositions. Another not yet studied property is the availability of oxygen during the formation of the minerals. Depending on how much oxygen is available, different minerals form. However, this is an important feature, because Mercury is thought to have evolved under highly reducing conditions, as opposed to Earth where nearly all material formed significant more oxidizing conditions. One phase that is strongly associated with reducing magma formation conditions is metallic iron. There are only few natural outcrops on Earth, were stronger reducing conditions were present so that metallic iron could be formed. One of these outcrops is the BĂŒhl quarry in northern Hesse, Germany. From there we used different samples to analyze the effect of oxygen availability on mid‐IR spectra of plagioclase feldspars.Key Points: We present infrared spectra of basaltic samples from the BĂŒhl, Hesse, Germany in preparation of the MERTIS experiment Comparison of feldspars formed at different oxygen fugacities showed no spectral differences This is an important result for MERTIS, which will investigate Mercury that formed under reducing conditions DLRhttp://bc-mertis-pi.uni-muenster.de

    Mid-IR spectral properties of different surfaces of silicate mixtures before and after excimer laser irradiation

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    The behaviour of the Christiansen feature (CF) and the Reststrahlen bands (RBs) in mid-infrared (IR) reflectance spectra on various silicate mixtures as pressed pellets and powders was investigated in high-vacuum. In addition, the influence of micrometeorite bombardment simulated with an excimer laser was studied. The mixtures cover a wide range of possible hermean surface compositions and include the minerals olivine, pyroxene (enstatite and diopside), and plagioclase. For the laser experiments, silicates were pressed into pellets and examined by reflectance infrared spectroscopy to identify changes caused by micrometeorite impacts as one tracer of space weathering on airless bodies such as Mercury. For comparison, measurements were also performed on loose powders with the same compositions under the same conditions. As a result, it can be shown that the RBs of olivine are rather affected by laser irradiation although SEM investigations show the destruction mainly of plagioclase, indicating that the RBs of plagioclase are masked by the “stronger” RBs of olivine and pyroxene. Furthermore, we found that the CF in mixtures with a plagioclase content of >50% does not shift significantly towards the CF of pyroxene or olivine. On the other hand, the CF of a mixture containing 50% olivine shifts significantly to shorter wavelengths when pyroxene or plagioclase are present in the mixture. Therefore, care is required when interpreting remote sensing data using the CF alone. We also found that the CF shifts to longer wavelengths in rough (regolithic) samples. Our work demonstrates large dependencies of the CF and the RBs positions on the composition of the silicates as well as on the nature of the surface, which is important for space missions, e.g., data acquired by the MErcury Radiometer and Thermal Infrared Spectrometer (MERTIS) experiment onboard BepiColombo

    Mid‐Infrared Spectroscopy of Feldspars From the BĂŒhl Basalt (Northern Hesse, Germany) Formed Under Reducing Conditions as Terrestrial Analogue of Mercury for MERTIS

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    Abstract The MErcury Radiometer and Thermal Infrared Spectrometer instrument onboard the BepiColombo spacecraft is designed to investigate Mercury’s surface in the mid‐infrared (mid‐IR). Based on MESSENGER data and modeling, Mercury is thought to be evolved under highly reducing conditions (e.g., McCubbin et al., 2017, https://doi.org/10.1002/2017JE005367; Namur & Charlier, 2017, https://doi.org/10.1038/ngeo2860). The modeling also indicates that Mercury's surface is rich in feldspar. However, it is unknown if reducing conditions during the emplacement of volcanic melts have an influence on the IR properties of feldspars. Therefore, we investigated basaltic samples from the BĂŒhl quarry in northern Hesse, Germany, that evolved under reducing conditions in the mid‐IR and compared the spectra with samples that experienced more oxidizing conditions during their formation. The BĂŒhl samples are feldspar‐rich and contain metallic iron in some areas. Our investigations show that there are no differences between feldspars that formed under different oxidizing conditions. All spectral properties could be explained by well‐known factors that affect mid‐IR spectra of silicates

    More diversity for volcanism: Ceres’ Ahuna Mons from Dawn’s Framing Camera data

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    In the last decades, the exploration of planets and moons by spacecraft revealed a variety of volcanic expressions. The recent visit to dwarf planet Ceres by the Dawn spacecraft is shedding light on a possible new, compositionally different volcanism falling into the cryovolcanism field. The dwarf planet’s properties, i.e., low bulk density, low internal temperatures and volatile-rich composition relative to terrestrial planets, would only generate melts composed of brines. On the other hand, Ceres’ carbonate- and clay-rich surface mineralogy suggests a cryovolcanism different from that of water-ice dominated icy satellites. The Dawn Framing Camera (FC) provides a complete global dataset for photo-geological investigations of Ceres, including a 35 m/pixel visible coverage, a 135 m/pixel multi-spectral coverage, and a 135 m/pixel global digital elevation model from stereo-photogrammetry. Domical landforms up to a few kilometers in elevation and tens of kilometers in diameter (referred to as tholi and montes) are found scattered across Ceres’ surface. Ahuna Mons is a 4-km topographic high distinct in its shape and morphology from other topographic features on Ceres. The mountain consists of two morphological units: a flank unit of unconsolidated material and a fractured (i.e., consolidated) summit unit. Steep slopes at the angle of repose characterize the flank unit, whereas the summit unit has a convex shape. The flank and summit morphologies and the morphometry of the mountain can be explained by the formation of a cryovolcanic dome, analogous to a silicic volcanic dome found on terrestrial planets. Albedo and crater size-frequency distribution measurements from FC imagery reveal geologically-recent activity on Ahuna Mons, occurring sometime within the last few hundreds Myr. The characteristics of and implications for this possible cryomagma for Ceres thermal and chemical evolution will be discussed

    Composition and structure of the shallow subsurface of Ceres revealed by crater morphology

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    Before NASA’s Dawn mission, the dwarf planet Ceres was widely believed to contain a substantial ice-rich layer below its rocky surface. The existence of such a layer has significant implications for Ceres’s formation, evolution, and astrobiological potential. Ceres is warmer than icy worlds in the outer Solar System and, if its shallow subsurface is ice-rich, large impact craters are expected to be erased by viscous flow on short geologic timescales. Here we use digital terrain models derived from Dawn Framing Camera images to show that most of Ceres’s largest craters are several kilometres deep, and are therefore inconsistent with the existence of an ice-rich subsurface. We further show from numerical simulations that the absence of viscous relaxation over billion-year timescales implies a subsurface viscosity that is at least one thousand times greater than that of pure water ice. We conclude that Ceres’s shallow subsurface is no more than 30% to 40% ice by volume, with a mixture of rock, salts and/or clathrates accounting for the other 60% to 70%. However, several anomalously shallow craters are consistent with limited viscous relaxation and may indicate spatial variations in subsurface ice content
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