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Dive into the research topics where J. Alexis P. Rodriguez is active.

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Featured researches published by J. Alexis P. Rodriguez.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010

Noachian and more recent phyllosilicates in impact craters on Mars

Alberto G. Fairén; Vincent F. Chevrier; Oleg V. Abramov; Giuseppe A. Marzo; P. Gavin; Alfonso F. Davila; Livio L. Tornabene; Janice L. Bishop; Ted L. Roush; C. Gross; T. Kneissl; Esther R. Uceda; James M. Dohm; Dirk Schulze-Makuch; J. Alexis P. Rodriguez; Ricardo Amils; Christopher P. McKay

Hundreds of impact craters on Mars contain diverse phyllosilicates, interpreted as excavation products of preexisting subsurface deposits following impact and crater formation. This has been used to argue that the conditions conducive to phyllosilicate synthesis, which require the presence of abundant and long-lasting liquid water, were only met early in the history of the planet, during the Noachian period (> 3.6 Gy ago), and that aqueous environments were widespread then. Here we test this hypothesis by examining the excavation process of hydrated minerals by impact events on Mars and analyzing the stability of phyllosilicates against the impact-induced thermal shock. To do so, we first compare the infrared spectra of thermally altered phyllosilicates with those of hydrated minerals known to occur in craters on Mars and then analyze the postshock temperatures reached during impact crater excavation. Our results show that phyllosilicates can resist the postshock temperatures almost everywhere in the crater, except under particular conditions in a central area in and near the point of impact. We conclude that most phyllosilicates detected inside impact craters on Mars are consistent with excavated preexisting sediments, supporting the hypothesis of a primeval and long-lasting global aqueous environment. When our analyses are applied to specific impact craters on Mars, we are able to identify both pre- and postimpact phyllosilicates, therefore extending the time of local phyllosilicate synthesis to post-Noachian times.


Geology | 2007

Martian hydrogeology sustained by thermally insulating gas and salt hydrates

Jeffrey S. Kargel; Roberto Furfaro; Olga Prieto-Ballesteros; J. Alexis P. Rodriguez; David R. Montgomery; Alan R. Gillespie; Giles M. Marion; Stephen Wood

Numerical simulations and geologic studies suggest that high thermal anomalies beneath, within, and above thermally insulating layers of buried hydrated salts and gas hydrates could have triggered and sustained hydrologic processes on Mars, producing or modifying chaotic terrains, debris flows, gullies, and ice-creep features. These simulations and geologic examples suggest that thick hydrate deposits may sustain such geothermal anomalies, shallow ground-water tables, and hydrogeologic activity for eons. The proposed mechanism may operate and be self-reinforcing even in today9s cold Martian climate without elevated heat flux.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Tsunami waves extensively resurfaced the shorelines of an early Martian ocean

J. Alexis P. Rodriguez; Alberto G. Fairén; Kenneth L. Tanaka; Mario Zarroca; Rogelio Linares; Thomas Platz; Goro Komatsu; Hideaki Miyamoto; Jeffrey S. Kargel; Jianguo Yan; V. C. Gulick; Kana Higuchi; Victor R. Baker; Natalie Glines

It has been proposed that ~3.4 billion years ago an ocean fed by enormous catastrophic floods covered most of the Martian northern lowlands. However, a persistent problem with this hypothesis is the lack of definitive paleoshoreline features. Here, based on geomorphic and thermal image mapping in the circum-Chryse and northwestern Arabia Terra regions of the northern plains, in combination with numerical analyses, we show evidence for two enormous tsunami events possibly triggered by bolide impacts, resulting in craters ~30 km in diameter and occurring perhaps a few million years apart. The tsunamis produced widespread littoral landforms, including run-up water-ice-rich and bouldery lobes, which extended tens to hundreds of kilometers over gently sloping plains and boundary cratered highlands, as well as backwash channels where wave retreat occurred on highland-boundary surfaces. The ice-rich lobes formed in association with the younger tsunami, showing that their emplacement took place following a transition into a colder global climatic regime that occurred after the older tsunami event. We conclude that, on early Mars, tsunamis played a major role in generating and resurfacing coastal terrains.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Martian outflow channels: How did their source aquifers form, and why did they drain so rapidly?

J. Alexis P. Rodriguez; Jeffrey S. Kargel; Victor R. Baker; V. C. Gulick; Daniel C. Berman; Alberto G. Fairén; Rogelio Linares; Mario Zarroca; Jianguo Yan; Hideaki Miyamoto; Natalie Glines

Catastrophic floods generated ~3.2 Ga by rapid groundwater evacuation scoured the Solar System’s most voluminous channels, the southern circum-Chryse outflow channels. Based on Viking Orbiter data analysis, it was hypothesized that these outflows emanated from a global Hesperian cryosphere-confined aquifer that was infused by south polar meltwater infiltration into the planet’s upper crust. In this model, the outflow channels formed along zones of superlithostatic pressure generated by pronounced elevation differences around the Highland-Lowland Dichotomy Boundary. However, the restricted geographic location of the channels indicates that these conditions were not uniform Boundary. Furthermore, some outflow channel sources are too high to have been fed by south polar basal melting. Using more recent mission data, we argue that during the Late Noachian fluvial and glacial sediments were deposited into a clastic wedge within a paleo-basin located in the southern circum-Chryse region, which was then completely submerged under a primordial northern plains ocean. Subsequent Late Hesperian outflow channels were sourced from within these geologic materials and formed by gigantic groundwater outbursts driven by an elevated hydraulic head from the Valles Marineris region. Thus, our findings link the formation of the southern circum-Chryse outflow channels to ancient marine, glacial, and fluvial erosion and sedimentation.


Astrobiology | 2016

The Argyre Region as a Prime Target for in situ Astrobiological Exploration of Mars

Alberto G. Fairén; James M. Dohm; J. Alexis P. Rodriguez; Esther R. Uceda; Jeffrey S. Kargel; Richard J. Soare; H. James Cleaves; Dorothy Z. Oehler; Dirk Schulze-Makuch; Elhoucine Essefi; Maria E. Banks; Goro Komatsu; Wolfgang Fink; Stuart J. Robbins; Jianguo Yan; Hideaki Miyamoto; Shigenori Maruyama; Victor R. Baker

At the time before ∼3.5 Ga that life originated and began to spread on Earth, Mars was a wetter and more geologically dynamic planet than it is today. The Argyre basin, in the southern cratered highlands of Mars, formed from a giant impact at ∼3.93 Ga, which generated an enormous basin approximately 1800 km in diameter. The early post-impact environment of the Argyre basin possibly contained many of the ingredients that are thought to be necessary for life: abundant and long-lived liquid water, biogenic elements, and energy sources, all of which would have supported a regional environment favorable for the origin and the persistence of life. We discuss the astrobiological significance of some landscape features and terrain types in the Argyre region that are promising and accessible sites for astrobiological exploration. These include (i) deposits related to the hydrothermal activity associated with the Argyre impact event, subsequent impacts, and those associated with the migration of heated water along Argyre-induced basement structures; (ii) constructs along the floor of the basin that could mark venting of volatiles, possibly related to the development of mud volcanoes; (iii) features interpreted as ice-cored mounds (open-system pingos), whose origin and development could be the result of deeply seated groundwater upwelling to the surface; (iv) sedimentary deposits related to the formation of glaciers along the basins margins, such as evidenced by the ridges interpreted to be eskers on the basin floor; (v) sedimentary deposits related to the formation of lakes in both the primary Argyre basin and other smaller impact-derived basins along the margin, including those in the highly degraded rim materials; and (vi) crater-wall gullies, whose morphology points to a structural origin and discharge of (wet) flows.


Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems | 2015

Tracking the weathering of basalts on Mars using lithium isotope fractionation models

Alberto G. Fairén; Elisabeth Losa-Adams; Carolina Gil-Lozano; Luis Gago-Duport; Esther R. Uceda; Steven W. Squyres; J. Alexis P. Rodriguez; Alfonso F. Davila; Christopher P. McKay

Abstract Lithium (Li), the lightest of the alkali elements, has geochemical properties that include high aqueous solubility (Li is the most fluid mobile element) and high relative abundance in basalt‐forming minerals (values ranking between 0.2 and 12 ppm). Li isotopes are particularly subject to fractionation because the two stable isotopes of lithium—7Li and 6Li—have a large relative mass difference (∼15%) that results in significant fractionation between water and solid phases. The extent of Li isotope fractionation during aqueous alteration of basalt depends on the dissolution rate of primary minerals—the source of Li—and on the precipitation kinetics, leading to formation of secondary phases. Consequently, a detailed analysis of Li isotopic ratios in both solution and secondary mineral lattices could provide clues about past Martian weathering conditions, including weathering extent, temperature, pH, supersaturation, and evaporation rate of the initial solutions in contact with basalt rocks. In this paper, we discuss ways in which Martian aqueous processes could have lead to Li isotope fractionation. We show that Li isotopic data obtained by future exploration of Mars could be relevant to highlighting different processes of Li isotopic fractionation in the past, and therefore to understanding basalt weathering and environmental conditions early in the planets history.


Icarus | 2008

North polar region of Mars : Advances in stratigraphy, structure, and erosional modification

Kenneth L. Tanaka; J. Alexis P. Rodriguez; James A. Skinner; Mary C. Bourke; C. M. Fortezzo; Kenneth E. Herkenhoff; Eric J. Kolb; Chris H. Okubo


Planetary and Space Science | 2014

A cold hydrological system in Gale crater, Mars

Alberto G. Fairén; Chris R. Stokes; Neil S. Davies; Dirk Schulze-Makuch; J. Alexis P. Rodriguez; Alfonso F. Davila; Esther R. Uceda; James M. Dohm; Victor R. Baker; S. M. Clifford; Christopher P. McKay; Steven W. Squyres


Meteoritics & Planetary Science | 2011

Meteorites at Meridiani Planum provide evidence for significant amounts of surface and near-surface water on early Mars

Alberto G. Fairén; James M. Dohm; Victor R. Baker; Shane D. Thompson; William C. Mahaney; Kenneth E. Herkenhoff; J. Alexis P. Rodriguez; Alfonso F. Davila; Dirk Schulze-Makuch; M. Ramy El Maarry; Esther R. Uceda; Ricardo Amils; Hirdy Miyamoto; Kyeong Ja Kim; Robert C. Anderson; Christopher P. McKay


Geomorphology | 2010

The sedimentology and dynamics of crater-affiliated wind streaks in western Arabia Terra, Mars and Patagonia, Argentina

J. Alexis P. Rodriguez; Kenneth L. Tanaka; Aya Yamamoto; Daniel C. Berman; James R. Zimbelman; Jeffrey S. Kargel; Sho Sasaki; Yan Jinguo; Hideaki Miyamoto

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Kenneth L. Tanaka

United States Geological Survey

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