Mars didn’t dry up in one go

The Perseverance rover has just landed on Mars. Meanwhile, its precursor Curiosity continues to explore the base of Mount Sharp (officially Aeolis Mons), a mountain several kilometres high at the centre of the Gale crater. Using the telescope on the ChemCam instrument to make detailed observations of the steep terrain of Mount Sharp at a distance, a French-US team headed by William Rapin, CNRS researcher at the Institut de Recherche en Astrophysique et Planétologie (CNRS/Université Toulouse III – Paul Sabatier/CNES)1, has discovered that the Martian climate recorded there alternated between dry and wetter periods, before drying up completely about 3 billion years ago.

Spacecraft in orbit around Mars had already provided clues about the mineral composition of the slopes of Mount Sharp. But now, ChemCam has successfully made detailed observations of the sedimentary beds from the planet’s surface, revealing the conditions under which they formed.  Moving up through the terrain observed, which is several hundred metres thick, the types of bed change radically. Lying above the lake-deposited clays that form the base of Mount Sharp, wide, tall, cross-bedded structures are a sign of the migration of wind-formed dunes during a long, dry climate episode.  Higher up still, thin alternating brittle and resistant beds are typical of river floodplain deposits, marking the return of wetter conditions. The climate of Mars therefore likely underwent several large-scale fluctuations between dry conditions and river and lake environments, until the generally arid conditions observed today took hold. During its extended mission, Curiosity is scheduled to climb the foothills of Mount Sharp and drill into its various beds. It will test this model, characterise in more details how the ancient climate evolved, and possibly understand the origin of these major fluctuations. 

View of hillocks on the slopes of Mount Sharp, showing the various types of terrain that will soon be explored by the Curiosity rover, and the ancient environments in which they formed, according to the sedimentary structures observed in ChemCam’s telescope images (mosaics A and B). © NASA/JPL-Caltech/MSSS/CNES/CNRS/LANL/IRAP/IAS/LPGN

This work was supported by CNES, the French Space Agency, for overseeing the construction of the ChemCam instrument and operating it together with Los Alamos National Laboratory (New Mexico, USA).

Further Resource

  • Scientific paper : Alternating Wet and Dry Depositional Environments Recorded in the Stratigraphy of Mt Sharp at Gale Crater, Mars, William Rapin, Gilles Dromart, David Rubin, Laetitia Le Deit, Nicolas Mangold, Lauren A. Edgar, Olivier Gasnault, Kenneth Herkenhoff, Stéphane Le Mouélic, Ryan B. Anderson, Sylvestre Maurice, Valerie K. Fox, Bethany L. Ehlmann, James L. Dickson, Roger C. Wiens. Geology, 8 April 2021. DOI: 10.1130/G48519.1

IRAP Contact

  • William Rapin, william.rapin@irap.omp.eu

More news

HiRISE: Length of day on a Jupiter-like exoplanet

Thanks to the HiRISE instrument, scientists from CNRS Terre & Univers have been able to characterize the young Jupiter-like exoplanet AF Lep b. Direct measurement of the light emitted by […]

SPIRou discovers new super-Earth neighboring our solar system

An international team led by researchers from the Institut de Recherche en Astrophysique et Planétologie (1) in Toulouse, the Institut de Planétologie et d’Astrophysique de Grenoble (2) , the Laboratoire […]

The contribution of sandy beaches to the oceanic silica cycle

Wave action at the coast significantly increases the dissolution rate of quartz grains on sandy beaches. By combining laboratory experiments and satellite observations, the global flow of silica to the […]

Search