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Featured researches published by Melissa S. Rice.


Science | 2014

A Habitable Fluvio-Lacustrine Environment at Yellowknife Bay, Gale Crater, Mars

John P. Grotzinger; Dawn Y. Sumner; L. C. Kah; K. Stack; S. Gupta; Lauren A. Edgar; David M. Rubin; Kevin W. Lewis; Juergen Schieber; N. Mangold; Ralph E. Milliken; P. G. Conrad; David J. DesMarais; Jack D. Farmer; K. L. Siebach; F. Calef; Joel A. Hurowitz; Scott M. McLennan; D. Ming; D. T. Vaniman; Joy A. Crisp; Ashwin R. Vasavada; Kenneth S. Edgett; M. C. Malin; D. Blake; R. Gellert; Paul R. Mahaffy; Roger C. Wiens; Sylvestre Maurice; J. A. Grant

The Curiosity rover discovered fine-grained sedimentary rocks, which are inferred to represent an ancient lake and preserve evidence of an environment that would have been suited to support a martian biosphere founded on chemolithoautotrophy. This aqueous environment was characterized by neutral pH, low salinity, and variable redox states of both iron and sulfur species. Carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, sulfur, nitrogen, and phosphorus were measured directly as key biogenic elements; by inference, phosphorus is assumed to have been available. The environment probably had a minimum duration of hundreds to tens of thousands of years. These results highlight the biological viability of fluvial-lacustrine environments in the post-Noachian history of Mars.


Science | 2014

Mineralogy of a Mudstone at Yellowknife Bay, Gale Crater, Mars

D. T. Vaniman; David L. Bish; D. W. Ming; Thomas F. Bristow; Richard V. Morris; David F. Blake; S. J. Chipera; Shaunna M. Morrison; Allan H. Treiman; E. B. Rampe; Melissa S. Rice; C. N. Achilles; John P. Grotzinger; Scott M. McLennan; J. Williams; James F. Bell; H. Newsom; Robert T. Downs; Sylvestre Maurice; Philippe Sarrazin; Albert S. Yen; J. M. Morookian; Jack D. Farmer; K. Stack; Ralph E. Milliken; Bethany L. Ehlmann; Dawn Y. Sumner; Gilles Berger; Joy A. Crisp; Joel A. Hurowitz

Sedimentary rocks at Yellowknife Bay (Gale crater) on Mars include mudstone sampled by the Curiosity rover. The samples, John Klein and Cumberland, contain detrital basaltic minerals, calcium sulfates, iron oxide or hydroxides, iron sulfides, amorphous material, and trioctahedral smectites. The John Klein smectite has basal spacing of ~10 angstroms, indicating little interlayer hydration. The Cumberland smectite has basal spacing at both ~13.2 and ~10 angstroms. The larger spacing suggests a partially chloritized interlayer or interlayer magnesium or calcium facilitating H2O retention. Basaltic minerals in the mudstone are similar to those in nearby eolian deposits. However, the mudstone has far less Fe-forsterite, possibly lost with formation of smectite plus magnetite. Late Noachian/Early Hesperian or younger age indicates that clay mineral formation on Mars extended beyond Noachian time.


Science | 2014

Elemental Geochemistry of Sedimentary Rocks at Yellowknife Bay, Gale Crater, Mars.

Scott M. McLennan; R. B. Anderson; James F. Bell; John C. Bridges; F. Calef; John Campbell; B. C. Clark; S. M. Clegg; P. G. Conrad; A. Cousin; D. J. Des Marais; Gilles Dromart; M. D. Dyar; Lauren A. Edgar; Bethany L. Ehlmann; Claude Fabre; O. Forni; O. Gasnault; R. Gellert; S. Gordon; A. Grant; John P. Grotzinger; S. Gupta; K. E. Herkenhoff; J. A. Hurowitz; Penelope L. King; S. Le Mouélic; L. A. Leshin; R. Leveille; Kevin W. Lewis

Sedimentary rocks examined by the Curiosity rover at Yellowknife Bay, Mars, were derived from sources that evolved from an approximately average martian crustal composition to one influenced by alkaline basalts. No evidence of chemical weathering is preserved, indicating arid, possibly cold, paleoclimates and rapid erosion and deposition. The absence of predicted geochemical variations indicates that magnetite and phyllosilicates formed by diagenesis under low-temperature, circumneutral pH, rock-dominated aqueous conditions. Analyses of diagenetic features (including concretions, raised ridges, and fractures) at high spatial resolution indicate that they are composed of iron- and halogen-rich components, magnesium-iron-chlorine–rich components, and hydrated calcium sulfates, respectively. Composition of a cross-cutting dike-like feature is consistent with sedimentary intrusion. The geochemistry of these sedimentary rocks provides further evidence for diverse depositional and diagenetic sedimentary environments during the early history of Mars.


Science | 2015

Deposition, exhumation, and paleoclimate of an ancient lake deposit, Gale crater, Mars

John P. Grotzinger; Sanjeev Gupta; M. C. Malin; David M. Rubin; Juergen Schieber; K. L. Siebach; Dawn Y. Sumner; Kathryn M. Stack; Ashwin R. Vasavada; Raymond E. Arvidson; F. Calef; Lauren Edgar; W.F. Fischer; J. A. Grant; J. L. Griffes; L. C. Kah; Michael P. Lamb; Kevin W. Lewis; N. Mangold; M. E. Minitti; Marisa C. Palucis; Melissa S. Rice; Rebecca M. E. Williams; R. A. Yingst; D. Blake; Diana L. Blaney; P. G. Conrad; Joy A. Crisp; William E. Dietrich; Gilles Dromart

Ancient lake system at Gale crater Since 2012, the Curiosity rover has been diligently studying rocky outcrops on Mars, looking for clues about past water, climate, and habitability. Grotzinger et al. describe the analysis of a huge section of sedimentary rocks near Gale crater, where Mount Sharp now stands (see the Perspective by Chan). The features within these sediments are reminiscent of delta, stream, and lake deposits on Earth. Although individual lakes were probably transient, it is likely that there was enough water to fill in low-lying depressions such as impact craters for up to 10,000 years. Wind-driven erosion removed many of these deposits, creating Mount Sharp. Science, this issue p.10.1126/science.aac7575, see also p. 167 Mount Sharp now stands where there was once a large intercrater lake system. [Also see Perspective by Chan] INTRODUCTION Remote observational data suggest that large bodies of standing water existed on the surface of Mars in its early history. This would have required a much wetter climate than that of the present, implying greater availability of water on a global basis and enhanced potential for global habitability. However, based on assumptions of a vast water inventory and models of atmospheric erosion, theoretical studies suggest a climate that was wetter but not by enough to sustain large lakes, even in depressions such as impact craters. RATIONALE The Mars Science Laboratory mission’s rover, Curiosity, provides the capability to test hypotheses about Mars’s past climate. The focus of the mission is the exploration of a ~5-km-high mountain, Aeolis Mons (informally known as Mount Sharp), located near the center of the ~140-km-wide Gale impact crater. Mount Sharp is underlain by hundreds of meters of sedimentary rock strata deposited ~3.6 billion to 3.2 billion years ago. These sediments accumulated in aqueous environments, recording the history of Mars’s ancient climate. Because of Curiosity’s ability to study these strata where they are exposed near the base of Mount Sharp, we can directly test the hypothesis that large impact craters were capable of accumulating and storing water as lakes for substantial periods of time. RESULTS Over the course of 2 years, Curiosity studied dozens of outcrops distributed along a ~9-km transect that also rose ~75 m in elevation. Image data were used to measure the geometry and grain sizes of strata and to survey the textures associated with sediment deposition and diagenesis. Erosion of Gale’s northern crater wall and rim generated gravel and sand that were transported southward in shallow streams. Over time, these stream deposits advanced toward the crater interior, transitioning downstream into finer-grained (sand-sized), southward-advancing delta deposits. These deltas marked the boundary of an ancient lake where the finest (mud-sized) sediments accumulated, infilling both the crater and its internal lake basin. After infilling of the crater, the sedimentary deposits in Gale crater were exhumed, probably by wind-driven erosion, creating Mount Sharp. The ancient stream and lake deposits are erosional remnants of superimposed depositional sequences that once extended at least 75 m, and perhaps several hundreds of meters, above the current elevation of the crater floor. Although the modern landscape dips northward away from Mount Sharp, the ancient sedimentary deposits were laid down along a profile that projected southward beneath Mount Sharp and indicate that a basin once existed where today there is a mountain. CONCLUSION Our observations suggest that individual lakes were stable on the ancient surface of Mars for 100 to 10,000 years, a minimum duration when each lake was stable both thermally (as liquid water) and in terms of mass balance (with inputs effectively matching evaporation and loss of water to colder regions). We estimate that the stratigraphy traversed thus far by Curiosity would have required 10,000 to 10,000,000 years to accumulate, and even longer if overlying strata are included. Though individual lakes may have come and gone, they were probably linked in time through a common groundwater table. Over the long term, this water table must have risen at least tens of meters to enable accumulation of the delta and lake deposits observed by Curiosity in Gale crater. Inclined strata in the foreground dip southward toward Mount Sharp and represent ancient delta deposits. These deposits transition into strata in the mid-field that were deposited in ancient lakes. The buttes and mesas in the background contain younger deposits that overlie and postdate the lake deposits beneath Mount Sharp. The outcrop in the foreground is about 6 m wide, and the buttes and mesas in the background are hundreds of meters wide and tens of meters high. The image has been white-balanced. [Credit: NASA/Caltech/JPL/MSSS] The landforms of northern Gale crater on Mars expose thick sequences of sedimentary rocks. Based on images obtained by the Curiosity rover, we interpret these outcrops as evidence for past fluvial, deltaic, and lacustrine environments. Degradation of the crater wall and rim probably supplied these sediments, which advanced inward from the wall, infilling both the crater and an internal lake basin to a thickness of at least 75 meters. This intracrater lake system probably existed intermittently for thousands to millions of years, implying a relatively wet climate that supplied moisture to the crater rim and transported sediment via streams into the lake basin. The deposits in Gale crater were then exhumed, probably by wind-driven erosion, creating Aeolis Mons (Mount Sharp).


Science | 2012

Ancient Impact and Aqueous Processes at Endeavour Crater, Mars

Steven W. Squyres; Raymond E. Arvidson; James F. Bell; F. Calef; B. C. Clark; Barbara A. Cohen; L.A. Crumpler; P. A. de Souza; William H. Farrand; Ralf Gellert; J. A. Grant; K. E. Herkenhoff; Joel A. Hurowitz; Jeffrey R. Johnson; Bradley L. Jolliff; Andrew H. Knoll; R. Li; Scott M. McLennan; D. W. Ming; D. W. Mittlefehldt; T. J. Parker; G. Paulsen; Melissa S. Rice; Steven W. Ruff; Christian Schröder; Albert S. Yen; K. Zacny

Martian Veins After more than 7 years of traveling across the Meridiani Planum region of Mars, the Mars Exploration rover Opportunity reached the Endeavour Crater, a 22-km-impact crater made of materials older than those previously investigated by the rover. Squyres et al. (p. 570) present a comprehensive analysis of the rim of this crater. Localized zinc enrichments that provide evidence for hydrothermal alteration and gypsum-rich veins that were precipitated from liquid water at a relatively low temperature provide a compelling case for aqueous alteration processes in this area at ancient times. Analysis of data from the Mars Exploration Rover Opportunity provides evidence for past water flow near an ancient crater. The rover Opportunity has investigated the rim of Endeavour Crater, a large ancient impact crater on Mars. Basaltic breccias produced by the impact form the rim deposits, with stratigraphy similar to that observed at similar-sized craters on Earth. Highly localized zinc enrichments in some breccia materials suggest hydrothermal alteration of rim deposits. Gypsum-rich veins cut sedimentary rocks adjacent to the crater rim. The gypsum was precipitated from low-temperature aqueous fluids flowing upward from the ancient materials of the rim, leading temporarily to potentially habitable conditions and providing some of the waters involved in formation of the ubiquitous sulfate-rich sandstones of the Meridiani region.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2014

Calcium sulfate veins characterized by ChemCam/Curiosity at Gale crater, Mars

M. Nachon; Samuel Michael Clegg; N. Mangold; Susanne Schröder; L. C. Kah; Gilles Dromart; A. M. Ollila; Jeffrey R. Johnson; D. Z. Oehler; John C. Bridges; S. Le Mouélic; O. Forni; Roger C. Wiens; R. B. Anderson; Diana L. Blaney; James F. Bell; B. C. Clark; A. Cousin; M. D. Dyar; Bethany L. Ehlmann; C. Fabre; O. Gasnault; John P. Grotzinger; J. Lasue; E. Lewin; R. Leveille; Scott M. McLennan; Sylvestre Maurice; P.-Y. Meslin; W. Rapin

The Curiosity rover has analyzed abundant light-toned fracture-fill material within the Yellowknife Bay sedimentary deposits. The ChemCam instrument, coupled with Mastcam and ChemCam/Remote Micro Imager images, was able to demonstrate that these fracture fills consist of calcium sulfate veins, many of which appear to be hydrated at a level expected for gypsum and bassanite. Anhydrite is locally present and is found in a location characterized by a nodular texture. An intricate assemblage of veins crosses the sediments, which were likely formed by precipitation from fluids circulating through fractures. The presence of veins throughout the entire similar to 5 m thick Yellowknife Bay sediments suggests that this process occurred well after sedimentation and cementation/lithification of those sediments. The sulfur-rich fluids may have originated in previously precipitated sulfate-rich layers, either before the deposition of the Sheepbed mudstones or from unrelated units such as the sulfates at the base of Mount Sharp. The occurrence of these veins after the episodes of deposition of fluvial sediments at the surface suggests persistent aqueous activity in relatively nonacidic conditions.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2010

Spirit Mars Rover Mission: Overview and selected results from the northern Home Plate Winter Haven to the side of Scamander crater

Raymond E. Arvidson; James F. Bell; Paolo Bellutta; Nathalie A. Cabrol; Jeffrey G. Catalano; J. Cohen; Larry S. Crumpler; D. J. Des Marais; T. A. Estlin; William H. Farrand; R. Gellert; J. A. Grant; R. N. Greenberger; Edward A. Guinness; K. E. Herkenhoff; J. A. Herman; Karl Iagnemma; James Richard Johnson; G. Klingelhöfer; R. Li; Kimberly Ann Lichtenberg; S. Maxwell; D. W. Ming; Richard V. Morris; Melissa S. Rice; Steven W. Ruff; Amy Shaw; K. L. Siebach; P. A. de Souza; A. W. Stroupe

Spirit Mars Rover Mission : Overview and selected results from the northern Home Plate Winter Haven to the side of Scamander crater


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2016

Mineralogy, provenance, and diagenesis of a potassic basaltic sandstone on Mars: CheMin X-ray diffraction of the Windjana sample (Kimberley area, Gale Crater)

Allan H. Treiman; David L. Bish; David T. Vaniman; S. J. Chipera; David F. Blake; Douglas W. Ming; Richard V. Morris; Thomas F. Bristow; Shaunna M. Morrison; M. B. Baker; E. B. Rampe; Robert T. Downs; Justin Filiberto; Allen F. Glazner; Ralf Gellert; Lucy M. Thompson; Mariek E. Schmidt; Laetitia Le Deit; Roger C. Wiens; A. C. McAdam; C. N. Achilles; Kenneth S. Edgett; Jack D. Farmer; Kim V. Fendrich; John P. Grotzinger; Sanjeev Gupta; John Michael Morookian; Megan Newcombe; Melissa S. Rice; John G. Spray

Abstract The Windjana drill sample, a sandstone of the Dillinger member (Kimberley formation, Gale Crater, Mars), was analyzed by CheMin X‐ray diffraction (XRD) in the MSL Curiosity rover. From Rietveld refinements of its XRD pattern, Windjana contains the following: sanidine (21% weight, ~Or95); augite (20%); magnetite (12%); pigeonite; olivine; plagioclase; amorphous and smectitic material (~25%); and percent levels of others including ilmenite, fluorapatite, and bassanite. From mass balance on the Alpha Proton X‐ray Spectrometer (APXS) chemical analysis, the amorphous material is Fe rich with nearly no other cations—like ferrihydrite. The Windjana sample shows little alteration and was likely cemented by its magnetite and ferrihydrite. From ChemCam Laser‐Induced Breakdown Spectrometer (LIBS) chemical analyses, Windjana is representative of the Dillinger and Mount Remarkable members of the Kimberley formation. LIBS data suggest that the Kimberley sediments include at least three chemical components. The most K‐rich targets have 5.6% K2O, ~1.8 times that of Windjana, implying a sediment component with >40% sanidine, e.g., a trachyte. A second component is rich in mafic minerals, with little feldspar (like a shergottite). A third component is richer in plagioclase and in Na2O, and is likely to be basaltic. The K‐rich sediment component is consistent with APXS and ChemCam observations of K‐rich rocks elsewhere in Gale Crater. The source of this sediment component was likely volcanic. The presence of sediment from many igneous sources, in concert with Curiositys identifications of other igneous materials (e.g., mugearite), implies that the northern rim of Gale Crater exposes a diverse igneous complex, at least as diverse as that found in similar‐age terranes on Earth.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2011

Opportunity Mars Rover mission: Overview and selected results from Purgatory ripple to traverses to Endeavour crater

Raymond E. Arvidson; J. W. Ashley; James F. Bell; M. Chojnacki; J. Cohen; T. Economou; William H. Farrand; R. L. Fergason; Iris Fleischer; Paul E. Geissler; R. Gellert; M. P. Golombek; John P. Grotzinger; Edward A. Guinness; Robert M. Haberle; K. E. Herkenhoff; J. A. Herman; Karl Iagnemma; Bradley L. Jolliff; James Richard Johnson; G. Klingelhöfer; Andrew H. Knoll; Amy T. Knudson; R. Li; Scott M. McLennan; D. W. Mittlefehldt; Richard V. Morris; T. J. Parker; Melissa S. Rice; Christian Schröder

Opportunity has been traversing the Meridiani plains since 25 January 2004 (sol 1), acquiring numerous observations of the atmosphere, soils, and rocks. This paper provides an overview of key disco ...


Science | 2016

Large wind ripples on Mars: A record of atmospheric evolution

Mathieu G.A. Lapotre; Ryan C. Ewing; Michael P. Lamb; Woodward W. Fischer; John P. Grotzinger; David M. Rubin; Kevin W. Lewis; M Ballard; Mitch D. Day; Sanjeev Gupta; Steven G. Banham; Nathan T. Bridges; D. J. Des Marais; A. A. Fraeman; J. A. Grant; Kenneth E. Herkenhoff; Douglas W. Ming; Michael A. Mischna; Melissa S. Rice; D A Sumner; Ashwin R. Vasavada; R. A. Yingst

Wind blowing over sand on Earth produces decimeter-wavelength ripples and hundred-meter– to kilometer-wavelength dunes: bedforms of two distinct size modes. Observations from the Mars Science Laboratory Curiosity rover and the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter reveal that Mars hosts a third stable wind-driven bedform, with meter-scale wavelengths. These bedforms are spatially uniform in size and typically have asymmetric profiles with angle-of-repose lee slopes and sinuous crest lines, making them unlike terrestrial wind ripples. Rather, these structures resemble fluid-drag ripples, which on Earth include water-worked current ripples, but on Mars instead form by wind because of the higher kinematic viscosity of the low-density atmosphere. A reevaluation of the wind-deposited strata in the Burns formation (about 3.7 billion years old or younger) identifies potential wind-drag ripple stratification formed under a thin atmosphere.

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James F. Bell

Arizona State University

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John P. Grotzinger

California Institute of Technology

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Roger C. Wiens

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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Jeffrey R. Johnson

Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory

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Raymond E. Arvidson

Washington University in St. Louis

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Diana L. Blaney

California Institute of Technology

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