A coupled model of episodic warming, oxidation and geochemical transitions on early Mars

Reconciling the geology of Mars with models of atmospheric evolution remains a major challenge. Martian geology is characterized by past evidence for episodic surface liquid water, and geochemistry indicating a slow and intermittent transition from wetter to drier and more oxidizing surface conditio...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature geoscience 2021-03, Vol.14 (3), p.127-132
Hauptverfasser: Wordsworth, Robin, Knoll, Andrew H., Hurowitz, Joel, Baum, Mark, Ehlmann, Bethany L., Head, James W., Steakley, Kathryn
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Reconciling the geology of Mars with models of atmospheric evolution remains a major challenge. Martian geology is characterized by past evidence for episodic surface liquid water, and geochemistry indicating a slow and intermittent transition from wetter to drier and more oxidizing surface conditions. Here we present a model that incorporates randomized injection of reducing greenhouse gases and oxidation due to hydrogen escape to investigate the conditions responsible for these diverse observations. We find that Mars could have transitioned repeatedly from reducing (hydrogen-rich) to oxidizing (oxygen-rich) atmospheric conditions in its early history. Our model predicts a generally cold early Mars, with mean annual temperatures below 240 K. If peak reducing-gas release rates and background carbon dioxide levels are high enough, it nonetheless exhibits episodic warm intervals sufficient to degrade crater walls, form valley networks and create other fluvial/lacustrine features. Our model also predicts transient build-up of atmospheric oxygen, which can help explain the occurrence of oxidized mineral species such as manganese oxides at Gale Crater. We suggest that the apparent Noachian–Hesperian transition from phyllosilicate deposition to sulfate deposition around 3.5 billion years ago can be explained as a combined outcome of increasing planetary oxidation, decreasing groundwater availability and a waning bolide impactor flux, which dramatically slowed the remobilization and thermochemical destruction of surface sulfates. Ultimately, rapid and repeated variations in Mars’s early climate and surface chemistry would have presented both challenges and opportunities for any emergent microbial life. Mars’s early climate and surface chemistry varied between a generally cold, oxidizing environment and warmer, more reducing conditions, according to a model of atmospheric evolution driven by stochastic, random injection of greenhouse gases.
ISSN:1752-0894
1752-0908
DOI:10.1038/s41561-021-00701-8