Loading…

Habitability of Martian Noachian Hydrothermal Systems as Constrained by a Terrestrial Analog on the Colorado Plateau

Volcanic features and impact craters are ubiquitous features on Mars, and hydrothermal systems associated with the production of these features should have been abundant in Mars’s early history. These hydrothermal systems represent potentially habitable environments and are therefore a high priority...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in:The planetary science journal 2021-08, Vol.2 (4), p.138
Main Authors: Crandall, Jake R., Filiberto, Justin, Castle, Nicholas, Potter-McIntyre, Sally L., Schwenzer, Susanne P., Olsson-Francis, Karen, Perl, Scott
Format: Article
Language:English
Subjects:
Citations: Items that this one cites
Items that cite this one
Online Access:Get full text
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:Volcanic features and impact craters are ubiquitous features on Mars, and hydrothermal systems associated with the production of these features should have been abundant in Mars’s early history. These hydrothermal systems represent potentially habitable environments and are therefore a high priority for continued investigations of the Martian crust. Here we present a Mars analog study where basaltic magma intruded water-bearing sediments to produce a high-temperature (as high as ∼700°C) hydrothermal system, which we use to constrain the potential habitability of similar systems on Mars via mineralogy and geochemistry including S, C, and O isotopic systematics. Our analog site suggests evidence for a habitable environment once the system cooled below 120°C and the potential presence of microbial activity based on the combination of dolomite and C-isotopic systems in the same sample. These findings highlight the importance of future missions to investigate the interface of sediments with magmas and/or late-stage impact melts where microbial life may have taken hold when temperature conditions allowed.
ISSN:2632-3338
2632-3338
DOI:10.3847/PSJ/ac053e