Haruhisa Tabata, Yasuhito Sekine, Kazumi Ozaki
Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta, 381 97-115, Sep 15, 2024 Peer-reviewedLead author
Mars has experienced drastic environmental evolution in terms of pH, redox, and desiccation. NASA's Curiosity rover discovered that the sediments of the Pahrump Hills member of the Murray formation in Gale Crater contained different redox states of Fe oxides. To interpret the observations, understanding the factors that control iron redox states within early Gale lakes on Mars is needed. Here, we present the results of a one-dimensional geochemical model of a closed-basin lake that considers the Fe(II) photo-oxidation reaction. Depending on the source of Fe(II) (groundwater vs. river flow), lake pH, advection rate, and atmospheric composition, we defined four types of chemical profiles in the lake; namely, Fe(II) dominated, Fe(III) dominated, carbonate precipitating, and redox-stratified profiles. The Fe(III) dominated profile corresponds to the end member case in which photo-oxidation effectively oxidizes the supplied Fe(II). The redox-stratified profile, interpreted as an intermediate condition between Fe(III) dominated profile and Fe(II) dominated profile, appears in broad parameter set when Fe(II) is supplied from the groundwater, typically with a low to moderate Fe(II) input flux at acidic to alkaline pH (pH 5–9) conditions; however, the low water flux due to the nature of the groundwater may be unable to explain the measured abundance of Fe oxides in the sediments. Another endmember case, the Fe(II) dominated profile, which would also be expected to generate mixed valence Fe oxides, occurs when the pH is acidic (pH 4–5); nevertheless, the acidic pH is inconsistent with the mineral assemblages of the sediments. Carbonate precipitating profiles were limited to the case in which Fe(II) is supplied by groundwater with high Fe input flux and alkaline pH of 8–9. These results may imply either the Fe(II) input flux was high enough for the redox-stratified case or Fe(II) photo-oxidation was suppressed by turbidity or by dusty/cloudy atmosphere, or possibly that Fe(II) oxides found in the Pahrump Hills member are, at least partly, of detrital origin. Although numerous other factors (ex., effect of lake depth, variable pH throughout the lake water, detailed chemical speciation) remain unconsidered, the diverse profiles in Fe redox resulting from Fe(II) photo-oxidation reaction sheds light on interpreting the variety and the evolution of redox condition on early Mars.