Role of 26Al and impact-generated atmosphere in the early thermal evolution and differentiation of Mars

1Gurpreet Kaur Bhatia
Planetary and Space Science (in Press) Link to Article [https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pss.2023.105783]
1Department of Physics, MM Engineering College, Maharishi Markandeshwar (Deemed to be University), Mullana-Ambala, Haryana, 133207, India

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Extremely 13C-enriched dolomite records interval of strong methanogenesis following a sulfate decline in the Miocene Ries impact crater lake

1Lingqi Zeng,1Jochen Gätjen,1Manuel Reinhardt,2,3,4Michael E. Böttcher,1Andreas Reimer,1Volker Karius,1Volker Thiel,1Gernot Arp
Geochmica et Cosmochimica acta (in Press) Link to Article [https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gca.2023.10.013]
1Geoscience Center, University of Göttingen, D-37077 Göttingen, Germany
2Geochemistry and Isotope Biogeochemistry, Leibniz Institute for Baltic Sea Research (IOW), D-18119 Warnemünde, Germany
3Marine Geochemistry, University of Greifswald, D-17489 Greifswald, Germany
4Interdisciplinary Faculty, University of Rostock, D-18059 Rostock, Germany
Copyright Elsevier

In impact crater lakes, the lacustrine sedimentary records may not solely reflect climatic changes but also potential erosional effects from lithologically distinct impactite formations. The hydrochemical and biogeochemical processes during the deposition of the Nördlinger Ries impact crater lake, which fall in the range of the mid-Miocene Climate Transition, were studied by analysing microcrystalline authigenic carbonates in a drill core succession, using stable oxygen and carbon isotopes in conjunction with biomarkers. These investigations revealed an early sulfidic interval characterized by thiophenes, iso- and anteiso-C15:0 acids derived from sulfate reducing bacteria, and dolomites with low to intermediate δ13Ccarb values. The subsequent distinctive interval is characterized by extremely 13C-enriched dolomite (δ13Ccarb up to +20.93 ± 0.05 ‰ V-PDB), decline of iso- and anteiso-C15:0 acids and is rich in an Archaea-derived archaeol that is 13C-enriched (-14.7‰), indicating extensive methanogenesis in sulfate-depleted lake porewater during early diagenesis. The sulfate decline results from successive sulfate reduction when replenishment of sulfate-bearing runoff water is limited. The carbonates exhibit enriched 18O due to pronounced evaporation in a long-resided water body and enriched 13C by methanogenesis. A change in provenance of water derived from the sulfur-rich suevite (impact melt-bearing breccia) and crystalline source rocks to the sulfur-poor Bunte Breccia (continuous ejecta blanket) is required. Intermittently high Si/Al and Zr/Al at the high δ13C interval suggests sporadic short-term runoff increase, leading to fluctuating physiochemical lake conditions. A subsequent decline in both δ13Ccarb and archaeol indicates a decreasing lake level with intermittent subaerial exposure events, supported by bioturbation and mud cracks. The concomitant lake oxygenation is well supported by increasing Pr/Ph ratios and lipids derived from aerobic methanotrophs (13C-depleted 3-methyl-hopanoids). In the youngest unit, allochthonous lignites and biomarkers from lacustrine/soil sources appear, high total sulphur contents and thiophenes recur, and stable C and O isotope values decrease again. These observations suggest another major provenance change of the inflowing solutes, with increasing influx from weathered pyrite-bearing Jurassic claystones. These findings demonstrate that the climatic record expected from the stable carbon and oxygen isotopes of the Ries carbonates is strongly overprinted by hydrochemical and biogeochemical processes due to changing ion influx from substrate rocks, along the course of the successive ejecta erosion and catchment changes. Such an intrinsic control of lacustrine biogeochemical processes is also expected for other hydrologically closed impact crater lake basins, where catchment rocks with distinctively different lithologies are present.