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Dive into the research topics where Mary Beth Wilhelm is active.

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Featured researches published by Mary Beth Wilhelm.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2016

Orbital evidence for more widespread carbonate-bearing rocks on Mars

James J. Wray; Scott L. Murchie; Janice L. Bishop; Bethany L. Ehlmann; Ralph E. Milliken; Mary Beth Wilhelm; Kimberly D. Seelos; Matthew Chojnacki

Carbonates are key minerals for understanding ancient Martian environments because they are indicators of potentially habitable, neutral-to-alkaline water and may be an important reservoir for paleoatmospheric CO_2. Previous remote sensing studies have identified mostly Mg-rich carbonates, both in Martian dust and in a Late Noachian rock unit circumferential to the Isidis basin. Here we report evidence for older Fe- and/or Ca-rich carbonates exposed from the subsurface by impact craters and troughs. These carbonates are found in and around the Huygens basin northwest of Hellas, in western Noachis Terra between the Argyre basin and Valles Marineris, and in other isolated locations spread widely across the planet. In all cases they cooccur with or near phyllosilicates, and in Huygens basin specifically they occupy layered rocks exhumed from up to ~5 km depth. We discuss factors that might explain their observed regional distribution, arguments for why carbonates may be even more widespread in Noachian materials than presently appreciated and what could be gained by targeting these carbonates for further study with future orbital or landed missions to Mars.


Organic Geochemistry | 2017

Xeropreservation of Functionalized Lipid Biomarkers in Hyperarid Soils in the Atacama Desert

Mary Beth Wilhelm; Alfonso F. Davila; Jennifer L. Eigenbrode; M. N. Parenteau; Linda L. Jahnke; Xiao-Lei Liu; Roger E. Summons; James J. Wray; Brian N. Stamos; Shane S. O’Reilly; Amy J. Williams

Our understanding of long-term organic matter preservation comes mostly from studies in aquatic systems. In contrast, taphonomic processes in extremely dry environments are relatively understudied and are poorly understood. We investigated the accumulation and preservation of lipid biomarkers in hyperarid soils in the Yungay region of the Atacama Desert. Lipids from seven soil horizons in a 2.5 m vertical profile were extracted and analyzed using GC-MS and LC-MS. Diagnostic functionalized lipids and geolipids were detected and increased in abundance and diversity with depth. Deeper clay units contain fossil organic matter (radiocarbon dead) that has been protected from rainwater since the onset of hyperaridity. We show that these clay units contain lipids in an excellent state of structural preservation with functional groups and unsaturated bonds in carbon chains. This indicates that minimal degradation of lipids has occurred in these soils since the time of their deposition between >40,000 and 2 million years ago. The exceptional structural preservation of biomarkers is likely due to the long-term hyperaridity that has minimized microbial and enzymatic activity, a taphonomic process we term xeropreservation (i.e. preservation by drying). The degree of biomarker preservation allowed us to reconstruct major changes in ecology in the Yungay region that reflect a shift in hydrological regime from wet to dry since the early Quaternary. Our results suggest that hyperarid environments, which comprise 7.5% of the continental landmass, could represent a rich and relatively unexplored source of paleobiological information on Earth.


Frontiers in Microbiology | 2017

Microbial Community and Biochemical Dynamics of Biological Soil Crusts across a Gradient of Surface Coverage in the Central Mojave Desert

Rakesh Mogul; Parag Vaishampayan; Mina Bashir; Christopher P. McKay; Keith E. Schubert; Rosalba Bornaccorsi; Ernesto Gomez; Sneha Tharayil; Geoffrey Payton; Juliana Capra; Jessica Andaya; Leonard Bacon; Emily Bargoma; David Black; Katie Boos; Michaela Brant; Michael Chabot; Danny Chau; Jessica Cisneros; Geoff Chu; Jane Curnutt; Jessica DiMizio; Christian Engelbrecht; Caroline Gott; Raechel Harnoto; Ruben Hovanesian; Shane Johnson; Britne Lavergne; Gabriel Martinez; Paul Mans

In this study, we expand upon the biogeography of biological soil crusts (BSCs) and provide molecular insights into the microbial community and biochemical dynamics along the vertical BSC column structure, and across a transect of increasing BSC surface coverage in the central Mojave Desert, CA, United States. Next generation sequencing reveals a bacterial community profile that is distinct among BSCs in the southwestern United States. Distribution of major phyla in the BSC topsoils included Cyanobacteria (33 ± 8%), Proteobacteria (26 ± 6%), and Chloroflexi (12 ± 4%), with Phormidium being the numerically dominant genus. Furthermore, BSC subsurfaces contained Proteobacteria (23 ± 5%), Actinobacteria (20 ± 5%), and Chloroflexi (18 ± 3%), with an unidentified genus from Chloroflexi (AKIW781, order) being numerically dominant. Across the transect, changes in distribution at the phylum (p < 0.0439) and genus (p < 0.006) levels, including multiple biochemical and geochemical trends (p < 0.05), positively correlated with increasing BSC surface coverage. This included increases in (a) Chloroflexi abundance, (b) abundance and diversity of Cyanobacteria, (b) OTU-level diversity in the topsoil, (c) OTU-level differentiation between the topsoil and subsurface, (d) intracellular ATP abundances and catalase activities, and (e) enrichments in clay, silt, and varying elements, including S, Mn, Co, As, and Pb, in the BSC topsoils. In sum, these studies suggest that BSCs from regions of differing surface coverage represent early successional stages, which exhibit increasing bacterial diversity, metabolic activities, and capacity to restructure the soil. Further, these trends suggest that BSC successional maturation and colonization across the transect are inhibited by metals/metalloids such as B, Ca, Ti, Mn, Co, Ni, Mo, and Pb.


Nature Geoscience | 2015

Spectral evidence for hydrated salts in recurring slope lineae on Mars

Lujendra Ojha; Mary Beth Wilhelm; Scott L. Murchie; Alfred S. McEwen; James J. Wray; Jennifer Hanley; M. Masse; Matt Chojnacki


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2016

Orbital evidence for more widespread carbonate-bearing rocks on Mars: More Widespread Carbonate Rocks on Mars

James J. Wray; Scott L. Murchie; Janice L. Bishop; Bethany L. Ehlmann; Ralph E. Milliken; Mary Beth Wilhelm; Kimberly D. Seelos; Matthew Chojnacki


Nature Geoscience | 2015

Corrigendum: Spectral evidence for hydrated salts in recurring slope lineae on Mars

Lujendra Ojha; Mary Beth Wilhelm; Scott L. Murchie; Alfred S. McEwen; James J. Wray; Jennifer Hanley; M. Masse; Matt Chojnacki


Archive | 2008

Correlation of Regional Topography and Martian Gully Orientation

Thomas G. L. Allen; Mary Beth Wilhelm; Jennifer Lynne Heldmann; Stephen J. Allen


Archive | 2016

MSL SAM-Like Evolved Gas Analyses of Si-rich Amorphous Materials

A. C. McAdam; Christine Knudson; Brad Sutter; S. Andrejkovičová; P. Douglas Archer; Heather B. Franz; Jennifer L. Eigenbrode; Richard V. Morris; Douglas W. Ming; Vivian Sun; Mary Beth Wilhelm; P. Mahaffy


Archive | 2015

Mars: Periglacial Morphology and Implications for Future Landing Sites

Jennifer Lynne Heldmann; Lauren Schurmeier; Christopher P. McKay; Alfonso F. Davila; C. R. Stoker; Margarita Marinova; Mary Beth Wilhelm


2015 AGU Fall Meeting | 2015

Preservation of Lipid Biomarkers Under Prolonged and Extreme Hyperaridity in Atacama Desert Soils

Mary Beth Wilhelm

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James J. Wray

Georgia Institute of Technology

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Lujendra Ojha

Georgia Institute of Technology

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Scott L. Murchie

Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory

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Christopher P. McKay

University of Colorado Boulder

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Bernard Laval

University of Western Australia

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