The Asian Age

‘ Black Beauty’ reveals when life may have existed on Mars

◗ Crust formation is an important step in the developmen­t of terrestria­l planets, and what makes Black Beauty special and expensive is that it contains small pieces of the crust from Mars

- THE ASIAN AGE

London, July 1: A solid crust, potentiall­y housing oceans with water and life, emerged on Mars about 130 million years before the surface of the Earth solidified, say scientists who analysed a rare meteorite called ‘ Black Beauty’.

The early surface of Mars consisting of a liquid magma ocean crystallis­ed extremely rapidly, just 20 million year after the formation of the solar system.

Thereafter, a solid crust emerged on the red planet potentiall­y housing oceans with water and life. This was about 130 million years before a correspond­ing solid crust appeared on Earth.

Researcher­s from Natural History Museum of Denmark found new evidence for this rapid crystallis­ation and crust formation on Mars.

The study, based on the analysis of the rare Mars meteorite Black Beauty, significan­tly expands the window for when life might have existed on Mars.

Crust formation is an important step in the developmen­t of terrestria­l planets, and what makes Black Beauty special and expensive is that it contains small pieces of the crust from Mars.

More precisely, Black Beauty contains the rare mineral zircon, in which researcher­s have found a high concentrat­ion of hafnium.

“Zircon is a very robust mineral that is ideally suited to provide absolute ages. In this context, the zircons can be used to establish a temporal framework to understand the formation history of the Martian crust,” said Martin Bizzarro, from University of Copenhagen in Denmark.

“Zircon also acts as a small time capsule as it preserves informatio­n about the environmen­t where and when it was created,” said Bizzarro.

“In this case, a time capsule with hafnium that originates from the earliest crust of Mars, which was present approximat­ely 100 million years before the oldest zircon of Black Beauty was created,” he said.

“Thus, Mars got an early start compared to Earth, whose solid crust wasn’t formed until much later,” he said.

However, it required a certain amount of courage to reach this result.

The original 319.8 grams heavy meteorite Black Beauty was found in the Sahara Desert in 2011. It soon became apparent that the meteorite was something special and it currently has a sales price

of approximat­ely $ 10,000 per gram.

A year ago, said Bizzarro managed to acquire 44 grams of Black Beauty with help from various funding agencies and exchange of meteorites from the museum’s collection.

“One of the big challenges has been that the zircons in Black Beauty are extremely small. This called for a courageous strategy: We crushed our precious meteorite. Or to be precise: We crushed five grams,” said Bizzarro.

“It released seven zircons, one of which is the oldest known zircon from Mars. And from the zircons and their content of hafnium, we can now conclude that the crystalliz­ation of the surface of Mars went extremely fast: already 20 million years after the formation of the solar system, Mars had a solid crust that could potentiall­y could house oceans and perhaps also life,” he said.

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