The well defined composition of the Comanche rock's carbonate (Magnesite0.62Siderite0.25Calcite 0.11Rhodochrosite0.02) and its host rock's composition, dominated by Mg-rich olivine, enable us to reproduce the atmospheric CO 2 partial pressure that may have triggered the formation of these carbonates. Hydrogeochemical one-dimensional transport modeling reveals that similar aqueous rock alteration conditions (including CO2 partial pressure) may have led to the formation of Mg-Fe-Ca carbonate identified in the Comanche rock outcrops (Gusev Crater) and also in the ultramafic rocks exposed in the Nili Fossae region. Hydrogeochemical conditions enabling the formation of Mg-rich solid solution carbonate result from equilibrium species distributions involving (1) ultramafic rocks (ca. 32wt% olivine; Fo0.72Fa 0.28), (2) pure water, and (3) CO2 partial pressures of ca. 0.5 to 2.0bar at water-to-rock ratios of ca. 500 molH2O mol -1rock and ca. 5C (278K). Our modeled carbonate composition (Magnesite0.64Siderite0.28Calcite 0.08) matches the measured composition of carbonates preserved in the Comanche rocks. Considerably different carbonate compositions are achieved at (1) higher temperature (85C), (2) water-to-rock ratios considerably higher and lower than 500molmol-1 and (3) CO2 partial pressures differing from 1.0bar in the model set up. The Comanche rocks, hosting the carbonate, may have been subjected to long-lasting (>104 to 105years) aqueous alteration processes triggered by atmospheric CO2 partial pressures of ca. 1.0bar at low temperature. Their outcrop may represent a fragment of the upper layers of an altered olivine-rich rock column, which is characterized by newly formed Mg-Fe-Ca solid solution carbonate, and phyllosilicate-rich alteration assemblages within deeper (unexposed) units. © 2012. American Geophysical Union. All Rights Reserved.
CITATION STYLE
Van Berk, W., Fu, Y., & Ilger, J. M. (2012). Reproducing early Martian atmospheric carbon dioxide partial pressure by modeling the formation of Mg-Fe-Ca carbonate identified in the Comanche rock outcrops on Mars. Journal of Geophysical Research: Planets, 117(10). https://doi.org/10.1029/2012JE004173
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