Monday, March 22, 2010

Candidate Landing Site over Potential Chloride Salt Deposits


There is an intriguing surface unit in parts of the ancient Martian highlands that may consist of chloride salts (like NaCl--table salt) which precipitated out of shallow lakes as in desert regions of Earth.

It has unusual thermal properties and distinctive morphologies, but lacks spectral absorption bands. All of these characteristics and the geologic settings are consistent with salt deposits. These deposits are often associated with clay minerals that do have distinctive absorption bands.

This particular location has been selected as a candidate landing site for the Mars Science Laboratory or another future rover. Hopefully the HiRISE images won't reveal too many boulders or steep slopes that would be hazardous. A stereo anaglyph is also available.

Photo credit: NASA/JPL/University of Arizona

Note: This candidate landing site is located in Meridiani Planum; the closest prominent crater to this location is Airy, which is to the east.

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