Northwestern Slope Valleys (NSVS): Prime Candidate Site For MSL Exploration Of Mars J.M. Dohm, R.C. Anderson, V Baker, T.M. Hare, S.J. Wheelock.

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Presentation transcript:

Northwestern Slope Valleys (NSVS): Prime Candidate Site For MSL Exploration Of Mars J.M. Dohm, R.C. Anderson, V Baker, T.M. Hare, S.J. Wheelock

Outline (1)What is a Prime site for science-driven missions? (2) Prime site from a geologically ancient perspective at regional scale (3) Prime site from a geologically recent perspective at regional scale (4) Prime site from a local perspective, which includes engineering specs, Trafficability, and traverse (1) regional scale (2) regional-local scale (3) local scale 1000s k m ancient 1000s k m recent 10s k m ancient √

What is a prime candidate site for MSL and other future science-driven International exploration? It is a site that MSL can: “ get to” based on current mission design, have optimal trafficability to perform “smart” reconnaissance for at least 20km (get the biggest bang for the buck)

It is a site that MSL can: traverse diverse (Prime) geologic terrains, which record diverse and far-reaching information: ancient to present geologic, sedimentologic, geochemical, paleohydrologic, paleoclimatic, and possible exobiologic (extant and/or fossilized life) information derived locally (aqueous/hydrothermal environments) and from great distances (catchment area)

Northern Slope Valleys (NSVs) is considered to be a Prime Target through a synthesis of existing Information (Tier-scalable geologic approach) Odyssey, Mars Express, MRO

Northern Slope Valleys (NSVs) Prime Target The NSVs region is located at a major break in slope between Tharsis bulge, southern highlands, and northern plains. MOLA

At regional scale and geologically ancient perspective, the NSVs is considered to be a Prime candidate site because it : archives a far-reaching stratigraphic record (Noachian to Amazonian rock materials; e.g., sedimentary capped volcanics), which includes time-stratigraphic markers

MOLA Part of geologic map of the western equatorial region (Scott and Tanaka, 1986) Geologic cross section (Dohm et al., 2001)

contains rock materials that may have sourced from the Noachian Thaumasia highlands mountain range (e.g., interpreted to be ancient metamorphic and basement complex; e.g., Scott and Tanaka, 1986) and Noachian- Amazonian basaltic and possibly silica-enriched volcanoes and lava flow fields NSVs E W 3D MOLA-based oblique projection

Connerney et al., 2005 Extremely ancient geologic provenances that are marked by magnetic anomalies, including the ancient Thaumasia highlands mountain range Ranges may also contain ancient hydrothermal deposits such as expected for Warrego rise in the Thaumasia highlands mountain range (Gulick, 1993; Dohm et al., 1998, 2001)

records macrostructures (10s to 1000s km-long mapped from MOLA topography), including structurally-controlled releases of putative ground water and other volatiles MOLA

comprises a system of valleys that generally correspond spatially to gravity lows and occur within a large topographic depression (e.g., Phillips et al., 2001); the gravity lows may represent low-density materials that partly infill the valleys and large topographic depressions (Dohm et al., 2001) Gravity (e.g., Yuan et al.,, 2001)

occurs in a region that is marked by magnetic anomalies (in a region that records Noachian-Amazonian fluvial activity, which could have exposed ancient magnetized materials) Crustal magnetization discovered by the Mars Global Surveyor MAG/ER experiment (e.g., Acuña et al.,, 2001)

encapsulates at least three distinct paleohydrologic regimes: Noachian-Early Hesperian NSVs flooding (~ m 3 /sec), Late Hesperian-Early Amazonian Mangala Valles flooding (~10 7 m 3 /sec), Amazonian sapping channel formation such Abus Vallis (~103 m3/sec), and recent groundwater seeps (<102 m3/sec), all of which expose deposits for in-situ study by MSL and other science-driven mission architectures MOLA

MOC At regional scale and geologically recent perspective, the NSVs Region is considered to be a Prime candidate site for MSL or other future International science-driven exploration of Mars because it occurs in a region of recent geologic and hydrogeologic activity

occurs in a region elevated in chlorine and hydrogen (referred to it as the Tharsis/Elysium corridor region; Dohm et al., 2005,2006): Unpublished GRS data from Bill Boynton and the rest of the GRS team submitted to JGR Planets (GRS-based JGR Planets Special Edition coming soon)

elevated hydrogen and chlorine could indicate aqueous activity (past and present), including interactions of magma with water/water-ice (unpublished GRS-based information).

Fairén et al., 2003 Catastrophic episodic outbursts of internal heat energy at Tharsis and elsewhere such as Elysium (Baker et al., 1991; Dohm et al., 2001; Fairén et al., 2003) triggers floods that inundate the northern plains to form bodies of water ranging from oceans (e.g., Parker et al. 1987; 1993; Clifford and Parker, 2001) to lakes (Scott et al., 1995) and associated transient climatic perturbations (10s to 100s of years; Baker et al., 1991, 2001)

+ Prime site from a local perspective, which includes engineering specs, Trafficability, and traverse MOLA

THEMIS colorized + + +

Landing Sites… Homing in on the

Elevation ~ MOLA defined elevation Fine Scale MOLA Elevation

Rock Abundance Rock Abundance = >5

Surface Roughness Surface Roughness ranges from moderate to smooth

Radar and Stealth Zone Proximity Edgett et al (1997)

Thermal Inertia

Need more data coverage !!! Landing Ellipse Dust ‘Free’ Area

Landing Area Inverted channel Possible alluvial fan deposits Themis Visible

A visit to the crater would add ~2-4 km Possible

Strengths: –Geologically and hydrologically and interesting and varied site. –Good extended mission track available for rover –Rover internal power source lessens the negative impact of dust. –One of very few dust ‘free’ areas in NSV region. Weaknesses: –Region has a lot of dust –Extended mission would take rover into dusty area –Close to the “stealth zone" Threats: –Large rocks on ejecta blanket and/or alluvial fan –Turbulent high winds are possible ???

Diverse information sets and theoretical prediction, (tier- scalable geologic approach leads to an increased probability) collectively point to the NSVs region as a prime target site for in-situ future geological, hydrological, sedimentological (paleosols), mineralogical, and biological investigations Conclusion

Rover Instrumentation: Will the suite of instruments….? Laser Induced Remote Sensing for Chemistry and Micro- Imaging Gas Chromatograph Mass Spectrometer/Tunable Laser Spectrometer X-Ray Diffraction/X-Ray Fluorescence Instrument Alpha particle X-Ray Spectrometer Radiation Assessment Detector Pulsed Neutron Source and Detector Marsprogram.jpl MSL will travel 10s of kilometers?