Title
The New Mars Aynthesis: A New Concept Of Mars Geo-Chemical History
Abstract
A new concept of Mars climatic and geo-chemical evolution is proposed, called the NMS (New Mars Synthesis) drawing on the full spectrum of available Mars data. The proposed synthesis is that Mars and Earth, having begun with similar surface conditions, did not strongly diverge from their similar paths 4.0 Billion years ago, in the Early Noachian, instead, under the NMS, they diverged much more recently in geologic time, in the Early Amazonian. Under the NMS, biology strongly affected the geo-chemical evolution of Mars, and allowed a stable and persistent greenhouse by producing a large oxygen component in the atmosphere. The NMS assumes Mars held biology form early on, has been geologically active throughout its history, that it had a northern paleo-ocean, that it has high, approximately, 4xLunar, cratering rates and that its climate changed recently in geologic time from being basically terrestrial to its present conditions. The proposed mechanism for the stability of the Mars greenhouse was a large oxygen component in the atmosphere that created acidic and highly oxidized conditions that prevented formation of Carbonates, and the thermal and gas buffering of the paleo-ocean. The greenhouse was thus biologically and hydrologically stabilized. The greenhouse was terminated by a large atmospheric cooling event in the Early Amazonian that killed the biosphere and froze the ocean stabilizing the greenhouse. This cooling event was probably caused by the formation of the Lyot impact basin. Given the long duration of this terrestrial biosphere in this NMS, the possible appearance of fossils in some rover images is not to be unexpected and the colonization of Mars by humanity may be aided extensive fossil biomass to use as raw material. © 2005 American Institute of Physics.
Publication Date
12-1-2005
Publication Title
AIP Conference Proceedings
Volume
746
Number of Pages
1199-1205
Document Type
Article; Proceedings Paper
Personal Identifier
scopus
DOI Link
https://doi.org/10.1063/1.1867246
Copyright Status
Unknown
Socpus ID
78751688530 (Scopus)
Source API URL
https://api.elsevier.com/content/abstract/scopus_id/78751688530
STARS Citation
Brandenburg, J. E., "The New Mars Aynthesis: A New Concept Of Mars Geo-Chemical History" (2005). Scopus Export 2000s. 3144.
https://stars.library.ucf.edu/scopus2000/3144