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Title: Soils of Eagle crater and Meridiani Planum at the Opportunity Rover landing site. Author: Soderblom LA, Anderson RC, Arvidson RE, Bell JF, Cabrol NA, Calvin W, Christensen PR, Clark BC, Economou T, Ehlmann BL, Farrand WH, Fike D, Gellert R, Glotch TD, Golombek MP, Greeley R, Grotzinger JP, Herkenhoff KE, Jerolmack DJ, Johnson JR, Jolliff B, Klingelhöfer G, Knoll AH, Learner ZA, Li R, Malin MC, McLennan SM, McSween HY, Ming DW, Morris RV, Rice JW, Richter L, Rieder R, Rodionov D, Schröder C, Seelos FP, Soderblom JM, Squyres SW, Sullivan R, Watters WA, Weitz CM, Wyatt MB, Yen A, Zipfel J. Journal: Science; 2004 Dec 03; 306(5702):1723-6. PubMed ID: 15576606. Abstract: The soils at the Opportunity site are fine-grained basaltic sands mixed with dust and sulfate-rich outcrop debris. Hematite is concentrated in spherules eroded from the strata. Ongoing saltation exhumes the spherules and their fragments, concentrating them at the surface. Spherules emerge from soils coated, perhaps from subsurface cementation, by salts. Two types of vesicular clasts may represent basaltic sand sources. Eolian ripples, armored by well-sorted hematite-rich grains, pervade Meridiani Planum. The thickness of the soil on the plain is estimated to be about a meter. The flatness and thin cover suggest that the plain may represent the original sedimentary surface.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]