Bradley J. Garczynski, Briony H. N. Horgan, Jeffrey R. Johnson, Melissa S. Rice, Lucia Mandon, Baptiste Chide, Andreas Bechtold, Pierre Beck, James F. Bell III, Erwin Dehouck, Alberto G. Fairén, Felipe Gómez, Pierre-Yves Meslin, Gerhard Paar, Mark A. Sephton, Justin I. Simon, Christoph Traxler, Alicia Vaughan, Roger C. Wiens, Tanguy Bertrand, Olivier Beyssac, Adrian J. Brown, Emily L. Cardarelli, Edward A. Cloutis, Louise Duflot, David T. Flannery, Patrick Gasda, Alexander G. Hayes, Christopher D. K. Herd, Linda Kah, Kjartan B. Kinch, Nina Lanza, Marco Merusi, Chase C. Million, Jorge I. Núñez, Ann M. Ollila, Clément Royer, Michael St. Clair, Christian Tate, Anastasia Yanchilina
{"title":"岩石涂层作为火星耶泽罗陨石坑底部后期表面变化的证据","authors":"Bradley J. Garczynski, Briony H. N. Horgan, Jeffrey R. Johnson, Melissa S. Rice, Lucia Mandon, Baptiste Chide, Andreas Bechtold, Pierre Beck, James F. Bell III, Erwin Dehouck, Alberto G. Fairén, Felipe Gómez, Pierre-Yves Meslin, Gerhard Paar, Mark A. Sephton, Justin I. Simon, Christoph Traxler, Alicia Vaughan, Roger C. Wiens, Tanguy Bertrand, Olivier Beyssac, Adrian J. Brown, Emily L. Cardarelli, Edward A. Cloutis, Louise Duflot, David T. Flannery, Patrick Gasda, Alexander G. Hayes, Christopher D. K. Herd, Linda Kah, Kjartan B. Kinch, Nina Lanza, Marco Merusi, Chase C. Million, Jorge I. Núñez, Ann M. Ollila, Clément Royer, Michael St. Clair, Christian Tate, Anastasia Yanchilina","doi":"10.1029/2025JE009242","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p>During the NASA <i>Perseverance</i> rover's exploration of the Jezero crater floor, coatings were commonly observed on rocks. These features may record past water-rock-atmosphere interactions on the crater floor, and understanding their origin is important for constraining the timing of potential water activity and habitability at Jezero. Here, we characterize the morphologic, chemical, and spectral properties of the crater floor rock coatings using color images, visible/near-infrared reflectance spectra, and chemical data from the Mastcam-Z and SuperCam instruments. We show that coatings are common and compositionally similar across the crater floor, and consistent with a mixture of dust, fine regolith, sulfates, and ferric oxides indurated as a result of one or more episodes of widespread surface alteration. All coatings exhibit a similar smooth homogenous surface with variable thickness, color, and spatial extent on rocks, likely reflecting variable oxidation and erosional expressions related to formation and/or exposure age. Coatings unconformably overlie eroded natural rock surfaces, suggesting relatively late deposition that may represent one of the last alteration episodes on the Jezero crater floor. While more common at Jezero, these coatings may be consistent with rock coatings previously observed in situ at other landing sites and may be related to duricrust formation, suggesting a global alteration process on Mars that is not unique to Jezero. The <i>Perseverance</i> rover likely sampled these rock coatings on the crater floor and the results from this study could provide important context for future investigations by the Mars Sample Return mission aimed at constraining the geologic and alteration history of Jezero crater.</p>","PeriodicalId":16101,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Geophysical Research: Planets","volume":"130 9","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":4.0000,"publicationDate":"2025-09-21","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1029/2025JE009242","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Rock Coatings as Evidence for Late Surface Alteration on the Floor of Jezero Crater, Mars\",\"authors\":\"Bradley J. Garczynski, Briony H. N. Horgan, Jeffrey R. Johnson, Melissa S. Rice, Lucia Mandon, Baptiste Chide, Andreas Bechtold, Pierre Beck, James F. Bell III, Erwin Dehouck, Alberto G. Fairén, Felipe Gómez, Pierre-Yves Meslin, Gerhard Paar, Mark A. Sephton, Justin I. Simon, Christoph Traxler, Alicia Vaughan, Roger C. Wiens, Tanguy Bertrand, Olivier Beyssac, Adrian J. Brown, Emily L. Cardarelli, Edward A. Cloutis, Louise Duflot, David T. Flannery, Patrick Gasda, Alexander G. Hayes, Christopher D. K. Herd, Linda Kah, Kjartan B. Kinch, Nina Lanza, Marco Merusi, Chase C. Million, Jorge I. Núñez, Ann M. Ollila, Clément Royer, Michael St. Clair, Christian Tate, Anastasia Yanchilina\",\"doi\":\"10.1029/2025JE009242\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p>During the NASA <i>Perseverance</i> rover's exploration of the Jezero crater floor, coatings were commonly observed on rocks. These features may record past water-rock-atmosphere interactions on the crater floor, and understanding their origin is important for constraining the timing of potential water activity and habitability at Jezero. Here, we characterize the morphologic, chemical, and spectral properties of the crater floor rock coatings using color images, visible/near-infrared reflectance spectra, and chemical data from the Mastcam-Z and SuperCam instruments. We show that coatings are common and compositionally similar across the crater floor, and consistent with a mixture of dust, fine regolith, sulfates, and ferric oxides indurated as a result of one or more episodes of widespread surface alteration. All coatings exhibit a similar smooth homogenous surface with variable thickness, color, and spatial extent on rocks, likely reflecting variable oxidation and erosional expressions related to formation and/or exposure age. Coatings unconformably overlie eroded natural rock surfaces, suggesting relatively late deposition that may represent one of the last alteration episodes on the Jezero crater floor. While more common at Jezero, these coatings may be consistent with rock coatings previously observed in situ at other landing sites and may be related to duricrust formation, suggesting a global alteration process on Mars that is not unique to Jezero. 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Rock Coatings as Evidence for Late Surface Alteration on the Floor of Jezero Crater, Mars
During the NASA Perseverance rover's exploration of the Jezero crater floor, coatings were commonly observed on rocks. These features may record past water-rock-atmosphere interactions on the crater floor, and understanding their origin is important for constraining the timing of potential water activity and habitability at Jezero. Here, we characterize the morphologic, chemical, and spectral properties of the crater floor rock coatings using color images, visible/near-infrared reflectance spectra, and chemical data from the Mastcam-Z and SuperCam instruments. We show that coatings are common and compositionally similar across the crater floor, and consistent with a mixture of dust, fine regolith, sulfates, and ferric oxides indurated as a result of one or more episodes of widespread surface alteration. All coatings exhibit a similar smooth homogenous surface with variable thickness, color, and spatial extent on rocks, likely reflecting variable oxidation and erosional expressions related to formation and/or exposure age. Coatings unconformably overlie eroded natural rock surfaces, suggesting relatively late deposition that may represent one of the last alteration episodes on the Jezero crater floor. While more common at Jezero, these coatings may be consistent with rock coatings previously observed in situ at other landing sites and may be related to duricrust formation, suggesting a global alteration process on Mars that is not unique to Jezero. The Perseverance rover likely sampled these rock coatings on the crater floor and the results from this study could provide important context for future investigations by the Mars Sample Return mission aimed at constraining the geologic and alteration history of Jezero crater.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Geophysical Research Planets is dedicated to the publication of new and original research in the broad field of planetary science. Manuscripts concerning planetary geology, geophysics, geochemistry, atmospheres, and dynamics are appropriate for the journal when they increase knowledge about the processes that affect Solar System objects. Manuscripts concerning other planetary systems, exoplanets or Earth are welcome when presented in a comparative planetology perspective. Studies in the field of astrobiology will be considered when they have immediate consequences for the interpretation of planetary data. JGR: Planets does not publish manuscripts that deal with future missions and instrumentation, nor those that are primarily of an engineering interest. Instrument, calibration or data processing papers may be appropriate for the journal, but only when accompanied by scientific analysis and interpretation that increases understanding of the studied object. A manuscript that describes a new method or technique would be acceptable for JGR: Planets if it contained new and relevant scientific results obtained using the method. Review articles are generally not appropriate for JGR: Planets, but they may be considered if they form an integral part of a special issue.