The bulk of rocks on the surface of Mars look similar
to the ‘Black Beauty’ meteorite found a few years ago in the Moroccan
desert, a new study suggests.
The meteorite NWA 7034 has been shown to be a 4.4 billion-year-old chunk of the Martian crust.
Spectroscopic measurements of the meteorite are a spot-on match with
orbital measurements of the Martian dark plains, areas where the
planet’s coating of red dust is thin and the rocks beneath are exposed,
researchers said.
When scientists started analysing Black Beauty in 2011, they knew they
had something special. Its chemical makeup confirmed that it was a
castaway from Mars, but it was unlike any Martian meteorite ever found.
Before Black Beauty, all the Martian rocks found on Earth were
classified as SNC meteorites (shergottites, nakhlites, or chassignites).
They’re mainly igneous rocks made of cooled volcanic material. But
Black Beauty is a breccia, a mashup of different rock types welded
together in a basaltic matrix.
It contains sedimentary components that match the chemical makeup of rocks analysed by the Mars rovers.
Scientists concluded that it is a piece of Martian crust - the first such sample to make it to Earth.
Cannon and co-author Jack Mustard from Brown thought Black Beauty might
help to clear up a longstanding enigma: the spectral signal from SNC
meteorites never quite match with remotely sensed spectra from the
Martian surface.
After acquiring a chip of Black
Beauty from Carl Agee from the University of New Mexico, Cannon and
Mustard used a variety of spectroscopic techniques to analyse it.
“What we wanted to do was get an average for the entire sample. That
overall measurement was what ended up matching the orbital data,” said
Mr. Cannon.
Researchers said the spectral match
helps put a face on the dark plains, suggesting that the regions are
dominated by brecciated rocks similar to Black Beauty.
Because the dark plains are dust-poor regions, they’re thought to be
representative of what hides beneath the red dust on much of the rest of
the planet.
“Mars is punctured by over 400,000
impact craters greater than 1 km in diameter. Because brecciation is a
natural consequence of impacts, it is expected that material similar to
NWA 7034 has accumulated on Mars over time,” they said.
In other words, Mustard said, the bulk of rocks on the surface of Mars
probably look a lot like Black Beauty: “dark, messy and beautiful.”
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