NASA
Orbiter Finds Martian Rock Record With 10 Beats to the Bar
Friday, December 5, 2008
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Rhythmic
bedding in sedimentary bedrock within Becquerel crater on
Mars is suggested by the patterns in this image from NASA's
Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter.
Credit:
NASA/JPL-Caltech/University of Arizona
Climate
cycles persisting for millions of years on ancient Mars left a
record of rhythmic patterns in thick stacks of sedimentary rock
layers, revealed in three-dimensional detail by a telescopic
camera on NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter.
Researchers
using the High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment camera
report the first measurement of a periodic signal in the rocks of
Mars. This pushes climate-cycle fingerprints much earlier in
Mars' history than more recent rhythms seen in Martian ice
layers. It also may rekindle debates about some patterns of rock
layering on Earth.
Layers of similar thickness repeat
dozens to hundreds of times in rocks exposed inside four craters
in the Arabia Terra region of Mars. In one of the craters,
Becquerel, bundles of a 10-layer pattern repeat at least 10
times, which could correspond to a known 10-to-one pattern of
changes in the tilt of the planet's rotation axis.
"Each
layer has weathered into a stair step in the topography where
material that's more resistant to erosion lies on top of material
that's less resistant to erosion," said Kevin Lewis of the
California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, who is the lead
author of a report on the periodic layering published in the Dec.
5 edition of the journal Science.
Some periodic change in
the environment appears to have affected how resistant the
rock-forming sediments became, perhaps from changes in what size
of sand or silt particles were deposited by the wind, or from how
the particles were cemented together after deposition.
Some
of the individual layers are less than three feet thick.
The
camera, called HiRISE for short, took pairs of images of each
site from slightly different angles in orbit, providing the
stereo information necessary for determining each layer's
thickness.
"It's easy to be fooled without knowing
the topography and measuring the layers in three dimensions,"
said Alfred McEwen of the University of Arizona, Tucson,
principal investigator for the camera and a co-author of the new
report. "With the stereo information, it is clear there's a
repeating pattern to these layers."
Geologists
commonly find "rhythms," or repeating patterns, in
sedimentary layers on Earth. Determining the source of the
rhythms can be difficult. Some result from annual or tidal
cycles, or from episodic flooding that may not be periodic at
all, but the role of longer-term astronomical cycles has been
debated. One step in showing that astronomical cycles can leave
their mark in sediments came from finding repeating five-layer
sets in some terrestrial bedrock, matching a known five-to-one
ratio of two cyclical variations in Earth's orbit.
Lewis
and colleagues found something similar on Mars: "Our
findings suggest that cycles of climate change led to the
patterns we see recorded in the Mars rock layers today, possibly
as a result of similar variations in Mars' orbit," he said.
"Mars has a 10-to-one ratio in cycles of how its tilt
changes -- smaller wobbles within larger packages. Sure enough,
we see a 10-to-one ratio in one Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, of
these layered deposits. It's like trying to identify a song --
it's easier if there are multiple instruments playing different
parts, rather than just a single rhythm."
In
addition to having rhythm of 10 beats to the bar instead of
Earth's five-beat pattern, Mars has characteristics that make it
a good laboratory for studying how astronomical cycles affect
climate. The tilt of Mars' axis varies much more than the axis of
Earth, because Earth's relatively large moon provides a
stabilizing effect. And, at least for most of its history, Mars
has lacked the oceans and thick atmosphere that, on Earth,
modulate the effects of orbital variations and add their own
cyclical patterns.
The 10-beat pattern of Mars' wobble
lasts about 1.2 million years. If the 10-layer bundles in
Becquerel crater are indeed signatures of that cycle, the 10 or
more bundles stacked on each other record about 12 million years
when environmental conditions affecting sedimentation were
generally steady except for effects of the changing tilt.
NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, a division of Caltech,
manages the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter for NASA's Science
Mission Directorate, Washington. Lockheed Martin Space Systems,
Denver, is the prime contractor for the project and built the
spacecraft. The HiRISE camera was built by Ball Aerospace and
Technologies Corp., Boulder, and is operated by the University of
Arizona.
Source:
NASA / JPL
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