Water Content of Shergottites

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Water Content of Shergottites

Postby David Entwistle » Thu Jun 21, 2012 8:35 pm

:geek: From the current issue of Geology Magazine:

Hydrous melting of the martian mantle produced both depleted and enriched shergottites by Francis M. McCubbin, Erik H. Hauri, Stephen M. Elardo, Kathleen E. Vander Kaaden, Jianhua Wang and Charles K. Shearer Jr.

absract wrote:The search for water in our solar system is one of the primary driving forces for planetary science and exploration because water plays an important role in many geologic processes and is required for biologic processes as we currently understand them. Excluding Earth, Mars is the most promising destination in the inner solar system to find water, as it is undoubtedly responsible for shaping many geomorphologic features observed on the present-day martian surface; however, the water content of the martian interior is currently unresolved. Much of our information about the martian interior comes from studies of the basaltic martian meteorites (shergottites). In this study we examined the water contents of magmatic apatites from a geochemically enriched shergottite (the Shergotty meteorite) and a geochemically depleted shergottite (the Queen Alexandria Range 94201 meteorite). From these data, we determined that there was little difference in water contents between the geochemically depleted and enriched shergottite magmas. The water contents of the apatite imply that shergottite parent magmas contained 730–2870 ppm H2O prior to degassing. Furthermore, the martian mantle contains 73–290 ppm H2O and underwent hydrous melting as recently as 327 Ma. In the absence of plate tectonics, the presence of water in the interior of Mars requires planetary differentiation under hydrous conditions. This is the first evidence of significant hydrogen storage in a planetary interior at the time of core formation, and this process could support elevated H abundances in the interiors of other terrestrial bodies like the Moon, Mercury, Venus, large differentiated asteroids, and Earth.


You can read more on the Carnegie Institution for Science web site.
David Entwistle
 
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