Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Could Mars be dark and altered?

July 9, 1998

There is a long known dichotomy in the martian albedo, with an associated, but mostly assumed, mineralogical split as well. The bright red regions are inferred to be weathered, oxidized dust and the dark grey regions unaltered volcanic material. A number of recent analyses suggest this division is unnaturally simplistic and the association of many dark regions with the former presence of water requires a re‐examination of the spectra in light of potential alteration minerals. I present an alternate interpretation of the reflectance spectral characteristics of some dark regions on Mars that includes dark layer silicates. If their presence is confirmed on Mars this will have implications for sequestration of current and past volatile inventories, clues to the extent and type of geochemical weathering, and potential zones where bacterial life forms may have emerged.

Publication Year 1998
Title Could Mars be dark and altered?
DOI 10.1029/98GL01255
Authors Wendy M. Calvin
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Geophysical Research Letters
Index ID 70185200
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse