The Mineralogy of Mars from Rocks in Hand

The Mineralogy of Mars from Rocks in Hand

Mineralogical Society of America via YouTube Direct link

Intro

1 of 18

1 of 18

Intro

Class Central Classrooms beta

YouTube videos curated by Class Central.

Classroom Contents

The Mineralogy of Mars from Rocks in Hand

Automatically move to the next video in the Classroom when playback concludes

  1. 1 Intro
  2. 2 The mineralogy of Mars, from 125 rocks in hand
  3. 3 Martion meteorites contain shock-implanted gas that matches the unique Mars atmospheric composition
  4. 4 Unique, ancient martian meteorites
  5. 5 Meteorite element ratios constrain the bulk planet composition and volatile inventory
  6. 6 Meteorites indicate Mars has a unique and diagnostic oxygen isotopic fingerprint
  7. 7 Martian meteorites formed by melting of ancient mantle sources with distinct radiogenic isotopes, trace elements, and redox states
  8. 8 Trace elements are both depleted and enriched
  9. 9 Igneous crystallization oges vary, but are mostly young
  10. 10 Cosmic-ray exposure ages are interpreted to date times of ejection from Mars
  11. 11 How representative of Mars are martian meteorites?
  12. 12 Martian meteorites and rocks analyzed by rovers
  13. 13 Trends in minor elements indicate different mantle source compositions for meteorites and rover analyzed rocks
  14. 14 Absence of any calc-alkaline rocks indicates no crustal recycling by plate tectonics
  15. 15 No detectable granitic rocks, just feldspathic rocks
  16. 16 No Earth-like continental crust on Mars
  17. 17 Despite much odo about purported evidence for life in ALH 84001, its organic matter, minerals, and intriguing
  18. 18 Conclusions Mars is a basalt covered world with sediments derived from cumulates that reflect diverse ancient mantle sources

Never Stop Learning.

Get personalized course recommendations, track subjects and courses with reminders, and more.

Someone learning on their laptop while sitting on the floor.