363-4 The Soil of Mars.
See more from this Division: SSSA Division: Soil Physics and Hydrology
See more from this Session: New Frontiers of Soil and Plant Sciences: Astropedology and Space Agriculture
Abstract:
A fundamental scientific barrier exists in this field of research: the concept of “soil” in planetary geology implies no assumption of in situ geochemical alteration. In Mars research, the definition is further compounded by the implicit assumption by some researchers that observable evidence of in situ soil alteration is, at best, improbable. This is not just an issue of semantics, because if mission payloads and science teams are not prepared to search for evidence of pedogenic processes, it is unlikely they will be discovered. The geological principle of Uniformitarianism implies that processes that produce features in observable situations (like soils in deserts on Earth of today) should be among the first considered when similar features are found on planets also known to have once had water. Yet, rare and highly-localized weathering processes on Earth have been invoked to explain Mars soil chemistry, at the near exclusion of what is arguably the most common chemical reaction on Earth: pedogenisis.
The opportunities ahead focus not on terminology, but on arriving at a consensus that the pedogenic alteration of Mars by water may span both space and time. The conceptual and instrumental toolkits required to exploit this information should be a first order science priority on future missions.
See more from this Division: SSSA Division: Soil Physics and Hydrology
See more from this Session: New Frontiers of Soil and Plant Sciences: Astropedology and Space Agriculture