scholarly journals The history of ground ice at Jezero Crater Mars and other past, present, and future landing sites

Icarus ◽  
2021 ◽  
pp. 114667
Author(s):  
Michael T. Mellon ◽  
Hanna G. Sizemore
Keyword(s):  
1999 ◽  
Vol 29 ◽  
pp. 131-135 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Guglielmin ◽  
F. Dramis

AbstractKnowledge of permafrost characteristics and distribution in Antarctica and their relationships with present and past climates is still poor. This paper reports investigations on permafrost in an area located between Nansen Ice Sheet to the south and Mount Melbourne (2732 m a.s.l.) to the north. Investigation methods included geomorphological surveys and geoelectrical soundings as well as crystallography, chemical and isotopic analyses of the ground ice. Geomorphological surveys helped to explain the relationships between periglacial landforms (e.g. rock glaciers and patterned ground) and the glacial history of the area. Geoelectrical soundings allowed us to define different ground-ice units in the ice-free areas. Each unit was characterised by a different type of permafrost (dry or ice-poor permafrost, marine or continental massive buried ice and sub-sea permafrost). To identify the nature of ground ice, trenches were dug and some shallow boreholes were drilled to a maximum depth of-3.6 m in massive buried ice. Samples of both ice-poor permafrost and massive ice were collected and analyzed. Chemical, isotopic δ18O and crystal analyses were also carried out. The relationships between climate and thermal regimes of the active layer and the upper part of permafrost were determined using a monitoring station for ground temperatures at Boulder Clay Glacier, near the Italian Antarctic station. During winter, there were several significant thermal-inversion events in the ground, which cannot be explained only by air-temperature changes, suggesting a possible influence of winter snowfall, even if these events are usually considered very rare.


Radiocarbon ◽  
1997 ◽  
Vol 40 (2) ◽  
pp. 953-962 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. T. Wilson

There are many kinds of natural ice found on our planet. These include glacier ice, ice sheets, cave ice, massive ground ice, ice-wedge ice and permafrost ice. The problems associated with the recovery and dating of the CO2 and other gases contained in these kinds of ice is reviewed. New data are presented on various kinds of natural ice. How this kind of data can be used to help determine the origin and history of natural ice samples is discussed, along with the kind of paleoclimatic information that might be obtained from natural ice samples.


2014 ◽  
Vol 119 (8) ◽  
pp. 1936-1949 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nathaniel E. Putzig ◽  
Roger J. Phillips ◽  
Bruce A. Campbell ◽  
Michael T. Mellon ◽  
John W. Holt ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 98 ◽  
pp. 07002
Author(s):  
Sergey Alexeev ◽  
Ludmila Alexeeva

The authors have studied the chemical composition of ground ice sampled from the frost mounds located in the unconsolidated sediments of the Sentsa River valley (Oka plateau, Eastern Sayan Mountains) to reconstruct the formation history of these cryogenic creations. Numerous frost mounds of various sizes are mainly composed of clayey silts with interlayers of heavy silts and ice lenses. It is found that the chemical composition of the melt ice sampled from lenses and layers within the frost mounds is HCO3 Ca, SO4-HCO3 Ca and NH4-HCO3 Ca with 6.5–15.6 mg/L salinity and pH = 5.6÷6.1. Whereas, the salinity of the melt texture-forming ice sampled from the ice with fractions of enclosing clayey silts was much higher: from 50 up to 792.5 mg/L. River and lake water is ultra-fresh HCO3 Ca with 99–132 mg/L salinity. The geochemical features of ground ice depend on a water-rock interaction, a presence of organic matter in the unconsolidated sediments and a repeated volcanic activity. The frost mounds are confined to a lacustrine sediments area in the backwater zone that was formed by the Late Pleistocene end moraine. The frost mounds have probably a mixed segregation-injection genesis.


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