Hydrothermally altered impact melt rock and breccia: contributions to the soil of Mars.
Abstract
An examination is made of samples of melt rock and breccia from 12 terrestrial impact craters to identify alteration minerals and their conditions of formation. It is found that in most cases the dominant assemblage is clay-silica-K feldspar-zeolite, suggesting hydrothermal alteration at low pressures and temperatures of 100-300 C. The clays are in the main Fe-chlorites and smectites, in most cases depleted in Al and enriched in Fe and Mg relative to their source rocks. The alteration of impact glass is found often to be complete, whereas the alteration of crystalline melt rock is limited to a few percent of the rock volume. Impact breccia is altered to only a slight extent compared with the alteration of glass. It is believed that impact-induced hydrothermal alteration is to be expected at Martian impact sites if significant quantities of ground ice and/or water are present.
- Publication:
-
Journal of Geophysical Research
- Pub Date:
- November 1982
- DOI:
- 10.1029/JB087iB12p10083
- Bibcode:
- 1982JGR....8710083A
- Keywords:
-
- Breccia;
- Crystallization;
- Hydrothermal Crystal Growth;
- Impact Melts;
- Mars Craters;
- Mars Surface;
- Mineralogy;
- Iron;
- Low Pressure;
- Low Temperature;
- Magnesium;
- Planetology;
- Mars Surface:Evolution