Abstract

Martian lava flows likely acquired S-rich material from the regolith during their emplacement on the planet’s surface. We investigated five of the twenty known nakhlites (Nakhla, Lafayette, Miller Range (MIL) 090032, Yamato 000593, and Yamato 000749) to determine whether these lavas show evidence of regolith assimilation, and to constrain the potential implications that this process has on chemical tracing of martian mantle source(s). To establish the proportionate influence of atmospheric, hydrothermal, and volcanic processes on nakhlite isotopic systematics we obtained in situ sulphur isotope data (Δ33S and δ34S) for sulphide grains (pyrrhotite and pyrite) in all five nakhlite samples. For Nakhla, Lafayette, and MIL 090032, these data are integrated with highly siderophile element (HSE) abundances and Os-isotope compositions, as well as textural information constrained prior to isotopic analysis. This work thereby provides the first Re-Os isotope systematics for two different nakhlites, and also the first Re-Os isotope data for martian sample for which detailed petrographic information was constrained prior to digestion.We report the largest variation in δ34S yet found in martian meteorites (−13.20‰ to +15.16‰). The relatively positive Δ33S and δ34S values of MIL 090032 (δ34S = +10.54 ± 0.09‰; Δ33S = −0.67 ± 0.10‰) indicate this meteorite assimilated sulphur affected by UV-photochemistry. In contrast, the strongly negative values of Lafayette (δ34S = −10.76 ± 0.14‰; Δ33S = −0.09 ± 0.12‰) are indicative of hydrothermal processes on Mars. Nakhla, Yamato 000593, and Yamato 000749 sulphides have a narrower range of sulphur isotope compositions (Δ33S and δ34S ∼ 0) that is consistent with no assimilation of martian surface materials during lava flow emplacement. Consequently we used this second group of Δ33S values to approximate the Δ33S of the nakhlite source, yielding a Δ33S value of −0.1‰.Nakhlite HSE patterns result from a sulphide-saturated melt where Ru-Os-Ir alloys/sulphide were likely crystallized during earlier phases of magmatic processing in Mars to result in the fractionated HSE patterns of the nakhlites. Our data, alongside a synthesis of previously published data, suggest assimilation of an enriched component to the primary nakhlite melt, potentially a late-stage crystallization cumulate from the martian magma ocean stage. In the context of this model, and within large uncertainties, our data hint at perturbation and potential decoupling of nakhlite Re-Os isotope systematics from other isotopic systems as a result of small degrees of assimilation of a regolith component with highly radiogenic 187Os/188Os.

Highlights

  • Magmas represent windows to comprehend the interior evolution and geochemical diversity of terrestrial planets

  • We propose a single magma composition for the generation of the nakhlites, whether after the Nakhla eruption assimilation with an unknown enriched component affected the nakhlite source during 61 Myr, producing subsequently the Lafayette parent melt at 1321 ± 9 Ma

  • Sulphur isotopic compositions were determined for sulphides in five nakhlites to ascertain the degree to which they have been affected by assimilation of the martian regolith

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Summary

Introduction

Magmas represent windows to comprehend the interior evolution and geochemical diversity of terrestrial planets. Magmatic activity and degassing are key processes for transferring sulphur, along with other elements, from the interior to the surface during the evolution of a planetary body. The terrestrial and martian mantles have been reported to contain similar and chondrite-relative highly siderophile elements (HSE; Os, Ir, Ru, Rh, Pt, Pd, Au, and Re) abundances (Birck and Allegre, 1994; Warren and Kallemeyn, 1996; Brandon et al, 2000, 2012; Dale et al, 2012; Tait and Day, 2018), which has important implications for accretion theory and astrophysical modelling of Solar System evolution (e.g., Bottke et al, 2010). The aim of this study was to use rhenium-osmium (Re-Os) isotope systematics and HSE abundances, alongside S-isotope systematics, to test whether the nakhlite group of martian meteorites preserve robust isotopic information from the martian interior (Morgan, 1986; Shirey and Walker, 1998; Righter et al, 2000; McSween and Huss, 2010; Walker, 2016)

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