NASA/JPL/USGS
NASA/JPL/USGS

Mars meteorite bombardment might have finished early

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New research suggests giant meteorite impacts on Mars ended 4.48 billion years ago, which might mean there was a period of over a billion years in which life could have developed. It's been thought that Mars and Earth were bombarded with meterorites possibly up until 3.8 billion years ago, but new analyses of minerals from meteorites believed to have come from Mars suggests otherwise. If correct, it might also mean habitable conditions developed on Earth earlier than previously thought.

Journal/conference: Nature Geoscience

Link to research (DOI): 10.1038/s41561-019-0380-0

Organisation/s: University of Western Ontario, Canada

Funder: NSERC Discovery Grant, Royal Society Research Grant, University of Portsmouth RIEF award, NASA’s Planetary Science Research Program.

Media Release

From: Springer Nature

Giant impacts ended early on Mars

Giant, life-inhibiting meteorite impacts ended on Mars by 4.48 billion years ago, according to a paper published online this week in Nature Geoscience. These findings suggest that conditions under which life could have potentially developed may have occurred on Mars from around 4.2 to 3.5 billion years ago.

The number and size of meteorite impacts on Mars and Earth gradually declined after the planets formed. Eventually, impacts became small and infrequent enough that the near-surface conditions could allow life to develop. However, when the heavy meteorite bombardment waned is debated. It has been proposed that there was a ‘late’ phase of heavy bombardment of both planets that ended around 3.8 billion years ago.

Desmond Moser and colleagues analysed the oldest-known mineral grains from meteorites that are believed to have originated from Mars’s southern highlands. The authors found that almost all of the grains had only been slightly modified by impacts. In comparison, over 80% of the grains studied from impacted areas on the Earth and Moon contained features associated with impacts, such as exposure to high pressures and temperatures. Therefore, the authors suggest that heavy bombardment of Mars ended before the analysed minerals formed. Consequently, the Martian surface would have become habitable by the time it is believed that water was abundant there.

The authors suggest that if giant impacts ended early on Mars, it is also plausible that Earth did not experience late heavy bombardment either, and that habitable conditions may have developed here earlier than previously thought.

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