-Caveat Lector-

Date: Thu, 25 Jan 2001 12:26:14 -0800 (PST)
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Mars Magmas Once Contained A Lot Of Water, Researchers Report
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News Office
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Cambridge, Massachusetts

CONTACT:
Deborah Halber, MIT News Office
(617) 258-9276, [EMAIL PROTECTED]

JANUARY 24, 2001

Mars magmas once contained a lot of water, researchers from MIT and U.
of Tennessee report

Finding suggests that volcanos helped bring water to the planet's
surface millions of years ago

CAMBRIDGE, Mass. -- Evidence from a Martian volcanic rock indicates that
Mars magmas contained significant amounts of water before eruption on
the planet's surface, researchers from the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology, the University of Tennessee and other institutions report in
the Jan. 25 issue of Nature.

Scientists say that channels on Mars's surface may have been carved by
flowing water and an ancient ocean may have existed there, but little is
known about the source of the water. One possible source is volcanic
degassing, in which water vapor is produced by magma spewing from
volcanos, but the Martian rocks that have reached Earth as meteorites
have notoriously low water content.

This study shows that before the molten rock that crystallized to form
Martian meteorites was erupted on the surface of the planet, it
contained as much as 2 percent dissolved water.

When magma reaches the planet's surface, the solubility of water in the
molten liquid decreases and the water forms vapor bubbles and escapes as
gas. The process is similar to the release of gas bubbles that occurs
when you open a can of soda.

Although this doesn't explain how water got into Mars in the first
place, it does show that water on the red planet once cycled through the
deep interior as well as existed on the surface, as similar processes
have cycled water through the Earth's interior throughout geologic
history.

A VISITOR FROM MARS

Timothy L. Grove, professor of Earth, Atmospheric and Planetary Sciences
at MIT, and University of Tennessee geologist Harry Y. McSween Jr.
analyzed the Mars meteorite Shergotty to provide an estimate of the
water that was present in Mars magmas prior to their eruption on the
surface.

Shergotty, a meteorite weighing around 5 kilograms was discovered in
India in 1865. It is one of a handful of proven Mars meteorites that
landed on Earth. It is relatively young -- around 175 million years old
-- and may have originated in the volcanic Tharsis region of the red
planet.

Its measured water content is only around 130-350 parts per million. But
by exploring the amount of water that would be necessary for its
pyroxenes -- its earliest crystallizing minerals -- to form, the
researchers have determined that at one time, Shergotty magma contained
around 2 percent water. They also have detected the presence of elements
that indicate the growth of the pyroxenes at high water contents.

This has important implications for the origin of the water that was
present on the surface of the planet during the past. This new
information points to erupting volcanos as a possible mechanism for
getting water to Mars's surface.

SQUEEZING HYDROGEN INTO ROCKS

In the interior of Mars, hot magma is generated at great depth. It then
ascends into the shallower, colder outer portions of the Martian
interior, where it encounters cooler rock that contains hydrogen-bearing
minerals. These minerals decompose when heated by the magma and the
hydrogen is released and dissolves in the magma.

The magma continues its ascent to the surface of the planet. When it
reaches very shallow, near-surface conditions in the crust, the magma
erupts and its water is released in the form of vapor.

The magma holds the water-creating hydrogen as the rock circulates
underneath the crust. It undergoes changes as it moves from areas of
enormous heat and pressure to cooler areas nearer the surface. When it
finally erupts through a volcano, the magma releases its water in the
form of vapor.

Grove recreates Mars and moon rocks in his laboratory for these studies.
By subjecting synthetic rocks to conditions of high temperature and
pressure, he can tell how much water was contained in magma at the time
that its crystals were formed. "What my experiment can do is estimate
how much water was involved in the process that led to the formation of
Mars meteorites. The only way you can reproduce the unique chemical
composition of these minerals is to have water present," he said.

Other authors on the Nature paper include McSween's graduate student,
Rachel C. F. Lentz; Lee R. Riciputi of the chemical and analytical
sciences division of Oak Ridge National Laboratory; Jeffrey G. Ryan, a
geologist at the University of South Florida; and Jesse C. Dann and
Astrid H. Holzheid of MIT's Department of Earth, Atmospheric and
Planetary Sciences.

This work was partly supported by NASA.

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