The Complex Exhumation History of Jezero Crater Floor Unit and Its Implication for Mars Sample Return

Author:

Quantin‐Nataf C.1ORCID,Alwmark S.23ORCID,Calef F. J.4ORCID,Lasue J.5ORCID,Kinch K.3ORCID,Stack K. M.4,Sun V.4ORCID,Williams N. R.4ORCID,Dehouck E.1ORCID,Mandon L.6ORCID,Mangold N.7ORCID,Beyssac O.8ORCID,Clave E.9ORCID,Walter S. H. G.10ORCID,Simon J. I.11ORCID,Annex A. M.1213ORCID,Horgan B.14ORCID,Rice James W.15,Shuster D.16,Cohen B.17ORCID,Kah L.18ORCID,Sholes Steven4ORCID,Weiss B. P.419ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Laboratoire de Géologie de Lyon: Terre, Planètes, Environnement Université de Lyon Université Claude Bernard Lyon1 Ecole Normale Supérieure de Lyon Université Jean Monnet Saint Etienne CNRS Villeurbanne France

2. Department of Geology Lund University Lund Sweden

3. Niels Bohr Institute University of Copenhagen Copenhagen Denmark

4. Jet Propulsion Laboratory California Institute of Technology Pasadena CA USA

5. Institut de Recherche en Astrophysique et Planétologie Université de Toulouse 3 Paul Sabatier Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique Centre National d'Etude Spatiale Toulouse France

6. LESIA Observatoire de Paris Université PSL CNRS Sorbonne Université Université de Paris Meudon France

7. Laboratoire Planétologie et Géosciences CNRS Nantes Université Université Angers Le Mans Université Nantes France

8. Institut de Minéralogie de Physique des Matériaux et de Cosmochimie CNRS Sorbonne Université Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle Paris France

9. Centre Lasers Intenses et Applications CNRS CEA Université de Bordeaux Bordeaux France

10. Department of Earth Sciences Freie Universitaet Berlin Institute of Geological Sciences Planetary Sciences and Remote Sensing Working Group Berlin Germany

11. Center for Isotope Cosmochemistry and Geochronology NASA Johnson Space Center Astromaterials Research and Exploration Science Houston TX USA

12. Division of Geological and Planetary Sciences California Institute of Technology Pasadena CA USA

13. Morton K. Blaustein Department of Earth & Planetary Sciences Johns Hopkins University Baltimore MD USA

14. Department of Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences Purdue University West Lafayette IN USA

15. School of Earth and Space Exploration Arizona State University Tempe AZ USA

16. Department of Earth and Planetary Science University of California Berkeley CA USA

17. NASA Goddard Space Flight Center Greenbelt MD USA

18. Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences University of Tennessee Knoxville TN USA

19. Department of Earth Atmospheric and Planetary Sciences Massachusetts Institute of Technology Cambridge MA USA

Abstract

AbstractDuring the first year of NASA's Mars 2020 mission, Perseverance rover has investigated the dark crater floor unit of Jezero crater and four samples of this unit have been collected. The focus of this paper is to assess the potential of these samples to calibrate the crater‐based Martian chronology. We first review the previous estimation of crater‐based model age of this unit. Then, we investigate the impact crater density distribution across the floor unit. It reveals that the crater density is heterogeneous from areas which have been exposed to the bombardment during the last 3 Ga to areas very recently exposed to bombardment. It suggests a complex history of exposure to impact cratering. We also display evidence of several remnants of deposits on the top of the dark floor unit across Jezero below which the dark floor unit may have been buried. We propose the following scenario of burying/exhumation: the dark floor unit would have been initially buried below a unit that was a few tens of meters thick. This unit then gradually eroded away due to Aeolian processes from the northeast to the west, resulting in uneven exposure to impact bombardment over 3 Ga. A cratering model reproducing this scenario confirms the feasibility of this hypothesis. Due to the complexity of its exposure history, the Jezero dark crater floor unit will require additional detailed analysis to understand how the Mars 2020 mission samples of the crater floor can be used to inform the Martian cratering chronology.

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Subject

Space and Planetary Science,Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous),Geochemistry and Petrology,Geophysics

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