http://www.climatechangenews.com/2016/07/04/red-planet-what-mars-can-teach-us-about-geoengineering/

Red planet: What Mars can teach us about geoengineering
Published on 04/07/2016, 3:36pm

The geology of meteorites from Mars could help to predict the long term
effects of carbon capture and storage

By Megan Darby

The atmosphere of Mars is too thin to support life or flowing water.

Yet scars of long dried up river basins on the surface suggest it was once
much denser and, scientists believe, mostly made up of carbon dioxide.

Understanding what happened to that CO2 could help tackle the greenhouse
gas here on Earth, according to researchers from Glasgow University.

“Our theory is it has been brought down into carbonate rocks,” explained
head of geography Martin Lee, at the Royal Society’s Summer Exhibition in
London.

“When you look at meteorites from Mars you find these crystals in the rock.”

Colour coded image of Osuga Valles shows rivers used to flow on Mars (Pic:
ESA/DLR/FU Berlin)

He held up a small chunk of clear calcite crystal. Weighing 45g, it held
equivalent carbon to the emissions from a car driving 110 metres, he said.

While cutting emissions is the priority to curb global warming, many
climate projections involve removing CO2 from the air to stabilise
temperatures.

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Water and carbon dioxide react with certain minerals to form stable
carbonates. This happens naturally over hundreds of thousands of years, but
can be artificially accelerated.

A pilot project in Iceland showed results within months, pumping emissions
from a geothermal plant underground to form rock.

Another trial in the Netherlands involved grinding up olivine, a greenish
mineral, and using it to “fertilise” the ocean so it absorbed more carbon.

Researcher Adrienne Macartney shows a piece of olivine, a mineral that can
react with carbon dioxide to remove it from the air

It is not yet clear how such interference with geological processes could
affect ecosystems, said doctoral researcher Adrienne Macartney.

Seeing how the reactions played out on Mars could help to predict the
impact of using these techniques to absorb and store carbon, with
potentially significant implications for the climate.

“Because the geoengineering is very new, we can apply some of the lessons
from Mars,” she said.

“It is quite shocking how little the two communities have talked about
this. When I start dialogues with carbon capture and storage companies,
they are also quite surprised that Mars research is so relevant

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