Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5488117 | Planetary and Space Science | 2017 | 20 Pages |
Abstract
Dacitic rocks, often indicative of crustal recycling on Earth, have been identified in some regions on Mars, as have possible hydrothermally/aqueously-altered dacites. To enable more robust identification of unaltered and altered dacites on Mars and other planetary bodies, we undertook a spectroscopic-structural-compositional study of altered and unaltered dacites from a dacitic volcanic region in Methana, Greece. Dacites erupted in this region range from fresh to pervasively hydrothermally altered, resulting in friable, Si-enriched products, as well as fumarolic deposition of Si and S-rich precipitates. Spectrally, fresh dacites are unremarkable in the 0.35-2.5 µm region with low, generally flat, reflectance and few, if any, absorption bands. Dacite infrared spectra exhibit Si-O absorption features in the 8-10 µm region (which are characteristic of Si-bearing rocks, in general). With increasing alteration, reflectance over the 0.35-2.5 µm range increases, absorption bands in the 1.4 and 1.9 µm region, associated with H2O/OH, and in the 2.2-2.3 µm region, associated with SiOH, become deeper, Fe3+-associated absorption bands in the 0.43 and 0.9 µm region appear, and the Christiansen feature near 8 µm moves to shorter wavelengths. Silica-rich coatings appear to be spectrally indistinguishable from Si-rich alteration. Alteration-formed sulfates may be detectable by the presence of diagnostic absorption features in the 0.35-2.5 µm region. Spectral similarities between different poorly crystalline high-Si phases make it difficult to uniquely determine the processes that formed high-Si surfaces that have been identified on Mars. However, the samples described here show a variety of spectral features that correspond to variable amounts of alteration. We find a similar range of spectral features, likely due to similar phases, on Mars, perhaps indicating a similar range of alteration environments. Comparison of laboratory spectra to Mars observational data also suggests that the major Si-rich regions likely consist of assemblages that more mineralogically complex than those included in this study.
Keywords
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Geophysics
Authors
Edward A. Cloutis, Victoria Jonatanson, Joshua L. Bandfield, Elena S. Amador, Frances Rivera-Hernández, P. Mann, Stanley A. Mertzman,