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Northeast Syrtis

Northeast Syrtis is a region of Mars once considered by NASA as a landing site for the Mars 2020 rover mission.[1] This landing site failed in the competition with Jezero crater, another landing site dozens of kilometers away from Northeast Syrtis.[2] It is located in the northern hemisphere of Mars at coordinates 18°N,77°E in the northeastern part of the Syrtis Major volcanic province, within the ring structure of Isidis impact basin as well. This region contains diverse morphological features and minerals, indicating that water once flowed here.[3][4][5][6][7][8] It may be an ancient habitable environment; microbes could have developed and thrived here.

The yellow rectangle indicates the location of Northeast Syrtis Major. Syrtis Major is one of the largest volcanic provinces on Mars. The west part is the ancient and huge impact basin—Isidis, about 1500 km in diameter.

The layered terrain of Northeast Syrtis is unique on the surface of Mars, containing diverse aqueous minerals such as like clay, carbonate, serpentine and sulfate,[6][9] as well as igneous minerals such as olivine and high-calcium and low-calcium pyroxene. Clay minerals form in the interaction between water and rock[10] and sulfate minerals usually form through intense evaporation on Earth. Similar processes may happen on Mars forming these minerals, which strongly suggests a history of water and rock interaction. In addition, megabreccia, possibly the oldest material throughout this region (some blocks are over 100 m in diameter), could give an insight into the primary crust when Mars first formed.[5] The location is an ideal site for studying the timing and evolution of the surface processes of Mars, such as huge impact basin formation, fluvial activity (valley networks, small outflow channels), groundwater activity, history of glaciation, and volcanic activity.[3]

Regional stratigraphy edit

 
The stratigraphic column of Northeast Syrtis. The thickness of each unit is hard to estimate. after [11]

The regional stratigraphy of Northeast Syrtis has been studied in detail.[3][7] This area is sandwiched between a huge shield volcano—Syrtis Major—and one of largest impact basins in the solar system, and therefore could provide a key constraint of the timing of key events in the history of Mars. The stratigraphy can be divided into four major units, from young to old:[12]

  1. Syrtis Major lavas unit contains high-calcium pyroxene bearing material;
  2. Layered sulfate-bearing unit, include poly-hydrated sulfates and jarosite;
  3. Olivine unit, olivine-enriched unit variably altered to carbonate and serpentine;
  4. Basement unit: The mixture of iron/magnesium (Fe/Mg) smectite and low-calcium pyroxene-bearing unit variably altered to Aluminium-clay bearing materials.[12]

The basement unit is one of newest units on Mars, recording early-stage evolution history of terrestrial planets. The change from carbonate to sulfate indicates a transition from alkaline-neutral to acid aqueous environments.[3]

Mars 2020 mission edit

The Mars 2020 rover launched in July 2020 with Atlas V rocket to reach Mars in February 2021. This rover inherits from the Mars Science Laboratory Curiosity, with similar entry, descent, and landing systems, and the sky crane. Besides exploring a likely habitable site and searching for signs of past life, collecting scientifically compelling samples (rock and regolith) which could address fundamental scientific questions if returned to Earth, is the main goal of the Mars 2020 mission.[13] The landing site's selection is the key part of this mission's success.[14]

Although Northeast Syrtis survived the cut in third Mars 2020 Landing Site Workshops, it failed final completion. The landing ellipse of Northeast Syrtis is 16 x 14 km and the smaller ellipse is 13.3 × 7.8 km with the help of advanced technologyTerrain-Relative Navigation (TRN).[2][15]

 
Landing ellipse of NE Syrtis, Mars. The blue oval is Northeast Syrtis landing ellipse. The white oval is the smaller anding ellipse with Terrain-Relative Navigation technique. The yellow oval is another potential landing site, Jezero landing ellipse. The context image is CTX (Context Camera) onboard Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter.

Region of interest edit

 
Mesa unit in Northeast Syrtis, Mars.

Mesa unit edit

 
Megabreccia in Northeast Syrtis.

The mesa is one of the interesting locations. It consists of five subunits: crater-retaining cap, boulder-shedding slopes exposing lightened blocks, olivine-carbonate unit, Fe/Mg-phyllosilicate, allowing easy to access diverse rocks.[16][17]

On the top of the mesa is a dark toned cap unit, composed of meter-scale boulders. It was interpreted as Hesperian Syrtis Major lava flows or lithified ash. These igneous rocks are suitable samples for acquiring the age of Martian geologic events, which could calibrate the planet dating method. Unlike Earth, planet dating mainly relies on crater counting, a method based on the assumption that the number of impact craters on a planet surface increases with the length of time that the surface has been exposed to space cratering, calibrated using the ages obtained by radiometric dating of samples of Luna and Apollo missions. The samples of this mission returned to Earth will be analyzed by state of the art equipment in laboratories. Igneous samples from Northeast Syrtis could provide four key time for Martian geology history, including (1) the timing of Isidis impact event, (2) the timing of emplacement of olivine-rich unit, (3) the timing of dark-toned mafic cap rock, (4) the timing of Syrtis lava flows, which would fundamentally improve human knowledge of early Mars and the early history of solar system, such as the late-heavy bombardment.[16][17]

This region exposes the largest high-olivine abundance rocks on Mars.[18] The origin of high-olivine rock is still in debate. Impact cumulates[5] or olivine-rich lava[19][20] are two leading hypotheses. A portion of olivine rock was altered to carbonate. Many hypotheses have been proposed to explain the origin of carbonate, including a serpentine springs system.[21][22] Carbonate is important sink of carbon, and is a crucial part of understanding the carbon cycle of Mars. Future sample return could shed light on the environmental conditions of carbonate. As well, the isotopic composition of carbonate through time, records the atmosphere loss, and it also reveals whether life once emerged on Mars.[16][17]

The lower part of mesa unit is the basement unit of the Northeast Syrtis region, consisting of Fe/Mg smectites and low calcium pyroxene. The basement unit was partially altered to form kaolinite. The kaolinite (Al-clay) usually overlying the Fe/Mg smectites across the Martian surface.[16] Weathering in a warm climate or acid leaching are two domain interpretations of kaolinite formation.[16][17]

Megabreccia edit
 
Layer sulfate unit in Northeast Syrtis.

Megabreccia occurs throughout the basement unit of Northeast Syrtis. The composition of these megabreccias is complex, including altered or mafic material.[5] These megabreccias may be uplifted and exposed by the Isidis Basin forming event. The megabreccia could reveal the nature of the remnant of Mars's primary crust or the Noachian-aged low-calcium pyroxene lavas. It also could constrain the timing of Martian dynamo activity.

Layer sulfate unit edit

Further to the south of the landing ellipse, there is a 500-metre (1,600 ft) thick sequence of sulfate deposits capped by lava flows from the later Syrtis Major volcanic formation. The layer of sulfates include poly-hydrated sulphates and jarosite. Jarosite usually indicate oxidizing and acid (pH<4) environments. The occurrence of jarosite indicates that the environment changed from neutral/alkaline (as suggested by extensive Fe/Mg smectites and carbonate) to acid.[3] The detection of sulfate adds more complexity to Martian geologic history.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Mars 2020 Rover". NASA. Retrieved 9 October 2018.
  2. ^ a b Hautaluoma, Grey (19 November 2018). "NASA Announces Landing Site for Mars 2020 Rover". NASA. Retrieved 2018-11-20.
  3. ^ a b c d e Ehlmann, Bethany L.; Mustard, John F. (June 2012). "An in-situ record of major environmental transitions on early Mars at Northeast Syrtis Major". Geophysical Research Letters. 39 (11): n/a. Bibcode:2012GeoRL..3911202E. doi:10.1029/2012GL051594.
  4. ^ Mangold, N.; Ansan, V.; Baratoux, D.; Costard, F.; Dupeyrat, L.; Hiesinger, H.; Masson, Ph.; Neukum, G.; Pinet, P. (May 2008). "Identification of a new outflow channel on Mars in Syrtis Major Planum using HRSC/MEx data". Planetary and Space Science. 56 (7): 1030–1042. Bibcode:2008P&SS...56.1030M. doi:10.1016/j.pss.2008.01.011. ISSN 0032-0633.
  5. ^ a b c d Mustard, J. F.; Ehlmann, B. L.; Murchie, S. L.; Poulet, F.; Mangold, N.; Head, J. W.; Bibring, J.-P.; Roach, L. H. (12 December 2009). "Composition, Morphology, and Stratigraphy of Noachian Crust around the Isidis basin". Journal of Geophysical Research. 114 (7). Bibcode:2009JGRE..114.0D12M. doi:10.1029/2009JE003349. S2CID 17913229.
  6. ^ a b Ehlmann, Bethany L.; Mustard, John F.; Swayze, Gregg A.; Clark, Roger N.; Bishop, Janice L.; Poulet, Francois; Des Marais, David J.; Roach, Leah H.; Milliken, Ralph E.; Wray, James J.; Barnouin-Jha, Olivier; Murchie, Scott L. (23 October 2009). "Identification of hydrated silicate minerals on Mars using MRO-CRISM: Geologic context near Nili Fossae and implications for aqueous alteration" (PDF). Journal of Geophysical Research. 114 (53). Bibcode:2009JGRE..114.0D08E. doi:10.1029/2009JE003339.
  7. ^ a b Bramble, Michael S.; Mustard, John F.; Salvatore, Mark R. (September 2017). "The geological history of Northeast Syrtis Major, Mars". Icarus. 293: 66–93. Bibcode:2017Icar..293...66B. doi:10.1016/j.icarus.2017.03.030. ISSN 0019-1035.
  8. ^ Ehlmann, Bethany L.; Mustard, John F. (June 2012). "An in-situ record of major environmental transitions on early Mars at Northeast Syrtis Major". Geophysical Research Letters. 39 (11): n/a. Bibcode:2012GeoRL..3911202E. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.656.7596. doi:10.1029/2012gl051594. ISSN 0094-8276. S2CID 3174336.
  9. ^ Murchie, Scott L.; Mustard, John F.; Ehlmann, Bethany L.; Milliken, Ralph E.; Bishop, Janice L.; McKeown, Nancy K.; Noe Dobrea, Eldar Z.; Seelos, Frank P.; Buczkowski, Debra L. (22 September 2009). "A synthesis of Martian aqueous mineralogy after 1 Mars year of observations from the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter" (PDF). Journal of Geophysical Research. 114 (E2). Bibcode:2009JGRE..114.0D06M. doi:10.1029/2009je003342. ISSN 0148-0227.
  10. ^ Poulet, F.; Bibring, J.-P.; Mustard, J. F.; Gendrin, A.; Mangold, N.; Langevin, Y.; Arvidson, R. E.; Gondet, B.; Gomez, C. (December 2005). "Phyllosilicates on Mars and implications for early martian climate". Nature. 438 (7068): 623–627. Bibcode:2005Natur.438..623P. doi:10.1038/nature04274. ISSN 0028-0836. PMID 16319882. S2CID 7465822.
  11. ^ Bethany, Ehlmann. "Mapping the Decadal Survey Drivers for Sample Return to Geologic Units Accessible in the Primary and Extended Missions from NE Syrtis and Midway" (PDF). Fourth landing site workshop for the Mars 2020 rover mission.
  12. ^ a b Quantin-Nataf, C.; Dromart, G.; Mandon, L. (2018). "NOACHIAN TO AMAZONIAN VOLCANIC ACTIVITY IN NE SYRTIS REGION" (PDF). www.hou.usra.edu. Retrieved 13 December 2018.
  13. ^ Witze, Alexandra (18 January 2017). "The $2.4-billion plan to steal a rock from Mars". Nature. 541 (7637): 274–278. Bibcode:2017Natur.541..274W. doi:10.1038/541274a. ISSN 0028-0836. PMID 28102284.
  14. ^ Skok, J. R. (18 October 2018). "NASA Prepares to Select Landing Site for Mars Life Detection Mission | SETI Institute". www.seti.org. Retrieved 13 December 2018.
  15. ^ Witze, Alexandra (11 December 2017). "Three sites where NASA might retrieve its first Mars rock". Nature. 542 (7641): 279–280. Bibcode:2017Natur.542..279W. doi:10.1038/nature.2017.21470. ISSN 0028-0836. PMID 28202980.
  16. ^ a b c d e Carter, John; Loizeau, Damien; Mangold, Nicolas; Poulet, François; Bibring, Jean-Pierre (March 2015). "Widespread surface weathering on early Mars: A case for a warmer and wetter climate". Icarus. 248: 373–382. Bibcode:2015Icar..248..373C. doi:10.1016/j.icarus.2014.11.011. ISSN 0019-1035.
  17. ^ a b c d Bishop, Janice L.; Dobrea, Eldar Z. Noe; McKeown, Nancy K.; Parente, Mario; Ehlmann, Bethany L.; Michalski, Joseph R.; Milliken, Ralph E.; Poulet, Francois; Swayze, Gregg A. (8 August 2008). "Phyllosilicate Diversity and Past Aqueous Activity Revealed at Mawrth Vallis, Mars". Science. 321 (5890): 830–833. Bibcode:2008Sci...321..830B. doi:10.1126/science.1159699. ISSN 0036-8075. PMC 7007808. PMID 18687963.
  18. ^ Christensen, Philip R.; Pearl, John C.; Smith, Michael D.; Bandfield, Joshua L.; Clark, Roger N.; Hoefen, Todd M. (2003-10-24). "Discovery of Olivine in the Nili Fossae Region of Mars". Science. 302 (5645): 627–630. Bibcode:2003Sci...302..627H. doi:10.1126/science.1089647. ISSN 1095-9203. PMID 14576430. S2CID 20122017.
  19. ^ Hamilton, Victoria E.; Christensen, Philip R. (2005). "Evidence for extensive, olivine-rich bedrock on Mars". Geology. 33 (6): 433. Bibcode:2005Geo....33..433H. doi:10.1130/g21258.1. ISSN 0091-7613.
  20. ^ Tornabene, Livio L.; Moersch, Jeffrey E.; McSween, Harry Y.; Hamilton, Victoria E.; Piatek, Jennifer L.; Christensen, Phillip R. (2 October 2008). "Surface and crater-exposed lithologic units of the Isidis Basin as mapped by coanalysis of THEMIS and TES derived data products". Journal of Geophysical Research. 113 (E10). Bibcode:2008JGRE..11310001T. doi:10.1029/2007je002988. ISSN 0148-0227.
  21. ^ Brown, Adrian J.; Hook, Simon J.; Baldridge, Alice M.; Crowley, James K.; Bridges, Nathan T.; Thomson, Bradley J.; Marion, Giles M.; de Souza Filho, Carlos R.; Bishop, Janice L. (August 2010). "Hydrothermal formation of Clay-Carbonate alteration assemblages in the Nili Fossae region of Mars". Earth and Planetary Science Letters. 297 (1–2): 174–182. arXiv:1402.1150. Bibcode:2010E&PSL.297..174B. doi:10.1016/j.epsl.2010.06.018. ISSN 0012-821X. S2CID 54496871.
  22. ^ Viviano, Christina E.; Moersch, Jeffrey E.; McSween, Harry Y. (September 2013). "Implications for early hydrothermal environments on Mars through the spectral evidence for carbonation and chloritization reactions in the Nili Fossae region". Journal of Geophysical Research: Planets. 118 (9): 1858–1872. Bibcode:2013JGRE..118.1858V. doi:10.1002/jgre.20141. ISSN 2169-9097.

Further reading edit

  • Mars 2020 Rover official site
  • Mars 2020 Rover Landing sites selection

External links edit

northeast, syrtis, region, mars, once, considered, nasa, landing, site, mars, 2020, rover, mission, this, landing, site, failed, competition, with, jezero, crater, another, landing, site, dozens, kilometers, away, from, located, northern, hemisphere, mars, coo. Northeast Syrtis is a region of Mars once considered by NASA as a landing site for the Mars 2020 rover mission 1 This landing site failed in the competition with Jezero crater another landing site dozens of kilometers away from Northeast Syrtis 2 It is located in the northern hemisphere of Mars at coordinates 18 N 77 E in the northeastern part of the Syrtis Major volcanic province within the ring structure of Isidis impact basin as well This region contains diverse morphological features and minerals indicating that water once flowed here 3 4 5 6 7 8 It may be an ancient habitable environment microbes could have developed and thrived here The yellow rectangle indicates the location of Northeast Syrtis Major Syrtis Major is one of the largest volcanic provinces on Mars The west part is the ancient and huge impact basin Isidis about 1500 km in diameter The layered terrain of Northeast Syrtis is unique on the surface of Mars containing diverse aqueous minerals such as like clay carbonate serpentine and sulfate 6 9 as well as igneous minerals such as olivine and high calcium and low calcium pyroxene Clay minerals form in the interaction between water and rock 10 and sulfate minerals usually form through intense evaporation on Earth Similar processes may happen on Mars forming these minerals which strongly suggests a history of water and rock interaction In addition megabreccia possibly the oldest material throughout this region some blocks are over 100 m in diameter could give an insight into the primary crust when Mars first formed 5 The location is an ideal site for studying the timing and evolution of the surface processes of Mars such as huge impact basin formation fluvial activity valley networks small outflow channels groundwater activity history of glaciation and volcanic activity 3 Contents 1 Regional stratigraphy 2 Mars 2020 mission 2 1 Region of interest 2 1 1 Mesa unit 2 1 1 1 Megabreccia 2 1 2 Layer sulfate unit 3 See also 4 References 5 Further reading 6 External linksRegional stratigraphy edit nbsp The stratigraphic column of Northeast Syrtis The thickness of each unit is hard to estimate after 11 The regional stratigraphy of Northeast Syrtis has been studied in detail 3 7 This area is sandwiched between a huge shield volcano Syrtis Major and one of largest impact basins in the solar system and therefore could provide a key constraint of the timing of key events in the history of Mars The stratigraphy can be divided into four major units from young to old 12 Syrtis Major lavas unit contains high calcium pyroxene bearing material Layered sulfate bearing unit include poly hydrated sulfates and jarosite Olivine unit olivine enriched unit variably altered to carbonate and serpentine Basement unit The mixture of iron magnesium Fe Mg smectite and low calcium pyroxene bearing unit variably altered to Aluminium clay bearing materials 12 The basement unit is one of newest units on Mars recording early stage evolution history of terrestrial planets The change from carbonate to sulfate indicates a transition from alkaline neutral to acid aqueous environments 3 Mars 2020 mission editThe Mars 2020 rover launched in July 2020 with Atlas V rocket to reach Mars in February 2021 This rover inherits from the Mars Science Laboratory Curiosity with similar entry descent and landing systems and the sky crane Besides exploring a likely habitable site and searching for signs of past life collecting scientifically compelling samples rock and regolith which could address fundamental scientific questions if returned to Earth is the main goal of the Mars 2020 mission 13 The landing site s selection is the key part of this mission s success 14 Although Northeast Syrtis survived the cut in third Mars 2020 Landing Site Workshops it failed final completion The landing ellipse of Northeast Syrtis is 16 x 14 km and the smaller ellipse is 13 3 7 8 km with the help of advanced technologyTerrain Relative Navigation TRN 2 15 nbsp Landing ellipse of NE Syrtis Mars The blue oval is Northeast Syrtis landing ellipse The white oval is the smaller anding ellipse with Terrain Relative Navigation technique The yellow oval is another potential landing site Jezero landing ellipse The context image is CTX Context Camera onboard Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter Region of interest edit nbsp Mesa unit in Northeast Syrtis Mars Mesa unit edit nbsp Megabreccia in Northeast Syrtis The mesa is one of the interesting locations It consists of five subunits crater retaining cap boulder shedding slopes exposing lightened blocks olivine carbonate unit Fe Mg phyllosilicate allowing easy to access diverse rocks 16 17 On the top of the mesa is a dark toned cap unit composed of meter scale boulders It was interpreted as Hesperian Syrtis Major lava flows or lithified ash These igneous rocks are suitable samples for acquiring the age of Martian geologic events which could calibrate the planet dating method Unlike Earth planet dating mainly relies on crater counting a method based on the assumption that the number of impact craters on a planet surface increases with the length of time that the surface has been exposed to space cratering calibrated using the ages obtained by radiometric dating of samples of Luna and Apollo missions The samples of this mission returned to Earth will be analyzed by state of the art equipment in laboratories Igneous samples from Northeast Syrtis could provide four key time for Martian geology history including 1 the timing of Isidis impact event 2 the timing of emplacement of olivine rich unit 3 the timing of dark toned mafic cap rock 4 the timing of Syrtis lava flows which would fundamentally improve human knowledge of early Mars and the early history of solar system such as the late heavy bombardment 16 17 This region exposes the largest high olivine abundance rocks on Mars 18 The origin of high olivine rock is still in debate Impact cumulates 5 or olivine rich lava 19 20 are two leading hypotheses A portion of olivine rock was altered to carbonate Many hypotheses have been proposed to explain the origin of carbonate including a serpentine springs system 21 22 Carbonate is important sink of carbon and is a crucial part of understanding the carbon cycle of Mars Future sample return could shed light on the environmental conditions of carbonate As well the isotopic composition of carbonate through time records the atmosphere loss and it also reveals whether life once emerged on Mars 16 17 The lower part of mesa unit is the basement unit of the Northeast Syrtis region consisting of Fe Mg smectites and low calcium pyroxene The basement unit was partially altered to form kaolinite The kaolinite Al clay usually overlying the Fe Mg smectites across the Martian surface 16 Weathering in a warm climate or acid leaching are two domain interpretations of kaolinite formation 16 17 Megabreccia edit nbsp Layer sulfate unit in Northeast Syrtis Megabreccia occurs throughout the basement unit of Northeast Syrtis The composition of these megabreccias is complex including altered or mafic material 5 These megabreccias may be uplifted and exposed by the Isidis Basin forming event The megabreccia could reveal the nature of the remnant of Mars s primary crust or the Noachian aged low calcium pyroxene lavas It also could constrain the timing of Martian dynamo activity Layer sulfate unit edit Further to the south of the landing ellipse there is a 500 metre 1 600 ft thick sequence of sulfate deposits capped by lava flows from the later Syrtis Major volcanic formation The layer of sulfates include poly hydrated sulphates and jarosite Jarosite usually indicate oxidizing and acid pH lt 4 environments The occurrence of jarosite indicates that the environment changed from neutral alkaline as suggested by extensive Fe Mg smectites and carbonate to acid 3 The detection of sulfate adds more complexity to Martian geologic history See also edit nbsp Astronomy portal nbsp Biology portal nbsp Solar System portalAstrobiology Climate of Mars Composition of Mars Exploration of Mars Geology of Mars Impact crater Inverted relief Lakes on Mars List of craters on Mars Water on Mars Mars landerReferences edit Mars 2020 Rover NASA Retrieved 9 October 2018 a b Hautaluoma Grey 19 November 2018 NASA Announces Landing Site for Mars 2020 Rover NASA Retrieved 2018 11 20 a b c d e Ehlmann Bethany L Mustard John F June 2012 An in situ record of major environmental transitions on early Mars at Northeast Syrtis Major Geophysical Research Letters 39 11 n a Bibcode 2012GeoRL 3911202E doi 10 1029 2012GL051594 Mangold N Ansan V Baratoux D Costard F Dupeyrat L Hiesinger H Masson Ph Neukum G Pinet P May 2008 Identification of a new outflow channel on Mars in Syrtis Major Planum using HRSC MEx data Planetary and Space Science 56 7 1030 1042 Bibcode 2008P amp SS 56 1030M doi 10 1016 j pss 2008 01 011 ISSN 0032 0633 a b c d Mustard J F Ehlmann B L Murchie S L Poulet F Mangold N Head J W Bibring J P Roach L H 12 December 2009 Composition Morphology and Stratigraphy of Noachian Crust around the Isidis basin Journal of Geophysical Research 114 7 Bibcode 2009JGRE 114 0D12M doi 10 1029 2009JE003349 S2CID 17913229 a b Ehlmann Bethany L Mustard John F Swayze Gregg A Clark Roger N Bishop Janice L Poulet Francois Des Marais David J Roach Leah H Milliken Ralph E Wray James J Barnouin Jha Olivier Murchie Scott L 23 October 2009 Identification of hydrated silicate minerals on Mars using MRO CRISM Geologic context near Nili Fossae and implications for aqueous alteration PDF Journal of Geophysical Research 114 53 Bibcode 2009JGRE 114 0D08E doi 10 1029 2009JE003339 a b Bramble Michael S Mustard John F Salvatore Mark R September 2017 The geological history of Northeast Syrtis Major Mars Icarus 293 66 93 Bibcode 2017Icar 293 66B doi 10 1016 j icarus 2017 03 030 ISSN 0019 1035 Ehlmann Bethany L Mustard John F June 2012 An in situ record of major environmental transitions on early Mars at Northeast Syrtis Major Geophysical Research Letters 39 11 n a Bibcode 2012GeoRL 3911202E CiteSeerX 10 1 1 656 7596 doi 10 1029 2012gl051594 ISSN 0094 8276 S2CID 3174336 Murchie Scott L Mustard John F Ehlmann Bethany L Milliken Ralph E Bishop Janice L McKeown Nancy K Noe Dobrea Eldar Z Seelos Frank P Buczkowski Debra L 22 September 2009 A synthesis of Martian aqueous mineralogy after 1 Mars year of observations from the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter PDF Journal of Geophysical Research 114 E2 Bibcode 2009JGRE 114 0D06M doi 10 1029 2009je003342 ISSN 0148 0227 Poulet F Bibring J P Mustard J F Gendrin A Mangold N Langevin Y Arvidson R E Gondet B Gomez C December 2005 Phyllosilicates on Mars and implications for early martian climate Nature 438 7068 623 627 Bibcode 2005Natur 438 623P doi 10 1038 nature04274 ISSN 0028 0836 PMID 16319882 S2CID 7465822 Bethany Ehlmann Mapping the Decadal Survey Drivers for Sample Return to Geologic Units Accessible in the Primary and Extended Missions from NE Syrtis and Midway PDF Fourth landing site workshop for the Mars 2020 rover mission a b Quantin Nataf C Dromart G Mandon L 2018 NOACHIAN TO AMAZONIAN VOLCANIC ACTIVITY IN NE SYRTIS REGION PDF www hou usra edu Retrieved 13 December 2018 Witze Alexandra 18 January 2017 The 2 4 billion plan to steal a rock from Mars Nature 541 7637 274 278 Bibcode 2017Natur 541 274W doi 10 1038 541274a ISSN 0028 0836 PMID 28102284 Skok J R 18 October 2018 NASA Prepares to Select Landing Site for Mars Life Detection Mission SETI Institute www seti org Retrieved 13 December 2018 Witze Alexandra 11 December 2017 Three sites where NASA might retrieve its first Mars rock Nature 542 7641 279 280 Bibcode 2017Natur 542 279W doi 10 1038 nature 2017 21470 ISSN 0028 0836 PMID 28202980 a b c d e Carter John Loizeau Damien Mangold Nicolas Poulet Francois Bibring Jean Pierre March 2015 Widespread surface weathering on early Mars A case for a warmer and wetter climate Icarus 248 373 382 Bibcode 2015Icar 248 373C doi 10 1016 j icarus 2014 11 011 ISSN 0019 1035 a b c d Bishop Janice L Dobrea Eldar Z Noe McKeown Nancy K Parente Mario Ehlmann Bethany L Michalski Joseph R Milliken Ralph E Poulet Francois Swayze Gregg A 8 August 2008 Phyllosilicate Diversity and Past Aqueous Activity Revealed at Mawrth Vallis Mars Science 321 5890 830 833 Bibcode 2008Sci 321 830B doi 10 1126 science 1159699 ISSN 0036 8075 PMC 7007808 PMID 18687963 Christensen Philip R Pearl John C Smith Michael D Bandfield Joshua L Clark Roger N Hoefen Todd M 2003 10 24 Discovery of Olivine in the Nili Fossae Region of Mars Science 302 5645 627 630 Bibcode 2003Sci 302 627H doi 10 1126 science 1089647 ISSN 1095 9203 PMID 14576430 S2CID 20122017 Hamilton Victoria E Christensen Philip R 2005 Evidence for extensive olivine rich bedrock on Mars Geology 33 6 433 Bibcode 2005Geo 33 433H doi 10 1130 g21258 1 ISSN 0091 7613 Tornabene Livio L Moersch Jeffrey E McSween Harry Y Hamilton Victoria E Piatek Jennifer L Christensen Phillip R 2 October 2008 Surface and crater exposed lithologic units of the Isidis Basin as mapped by coanalysis of THEMIS and TES derived data products Journal of Geophysical Research 113 E10 Bibcode 2008JGRE 11310001T doi 10 1029 2007je002988 ISSN 0148 0227 Brown Adrian J Hook Simon J Baldridge Alice M Crowley James K Bridges Nathan T Thomson Bradley J Marion Giles M de Souza Filho Carlos R Bishop Janice L August 2010 Hydrothermal formation of Clay Carbonate alteration assemblages in the Nili Fossae region of Mars Earth and Planetary Science Letters 297 1 2 174 182 arXiv 1402 1150 Bibcode 2010E amp PSL 297 174B doi 10 1016 j epsl 2010 06 018 ISSN 0012 821X S2CID 54496871 Viviano Christina E Moersch Jeffrey E McSween Harry Y September 2013 Implications for early hydrothermal environments on Mars through the spectral evidence for carbonation and chloritization reactions in the Nili Fossae region Journal of Geophysical Research Planets 118 9 1858 1872 Bibcode 2013JGRE 118 1858V doi 10 1002 jgre 20141 ISSN 2169 9097 Further reading editMars 2020 Rover official site Mars 2020 Rover Landing sites selectionExternal links edit Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Northeast Syrtis amp oldid 1097393930, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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