Rocks that stood out as light-colored dots on the reddish-orange surface of Mars now are the latest evidence that areas
of the small planet may have once supported wet oases with humid climates and heavy rainfall comparable to tropical
The rocks discovered by NASA's Perseverance Mars rover are white, aluminum-rich kaolinite clay, which forms on Earth
after rocks and sediment are leached of all other minerals by millions of years of a wet, rainy climate.
These findings were published Monday (Dec. 1) in the journal Communications Earth & Environment by lead author Adrian
Broz, a Purdue University postdoctoral research associate in the lab of Briony Horgan, a long-term planner on NASA's
Mars Perseverance rover mission and professor of planetary science in the Department of Earth, Atmospheric, and
Planetary Sciences in Purdue's College of Science.
"Elsewhere on Mars, rocks like these are probably some of the most important outcrops we've seen from orbit because they
are just so hard to form," Horgan said. "You need so much water that we think these could be evidence of an ancient
warmer and wetter climate where there was rain falling for millions of years."
Broz said tropical climates like rainforests are the most common environments to find kaolinite clay on Earth.
"So when you see kaolinite on a place like Mars, where it's barren, cold and with certainly no liquid water at the
surface, it tells us that there was once a lot more water than there is today," said Broz, a postdoctoral collaborator
on the Perseverance rover.
Implications for Mars' ancient climate
The kaolinite fragments, which range from pebbles to boulders, are the latest small pieces to the larger debate
regarding Mars' climate billions of years ago. Initial examinations by the Mars rover's SuperCam and Mastcam-Z
instruments were used to compare the kaolinite to similar rocks found on Earth. The Martian fragments could offer
significant insight into not only the planet's past environmental stages, but also how Mars came to its current barren
Horgan said kaolinite also carries its own mystery. There is no major outcropping nearby where the light-colored rocks
could have originated despite being scattered throughout the mission path Perseverance has followed since landing at the
Jezero crater in February 2021. The crater used to contain a lake about twice the size of Lake Tahoe.
"They're clearly recording an incredible water event, but where did they come from?" Horgan said. "Maybe they were
washed into Jezero's lake by the river that formed the delta, or maybe they were thrown into Jezero by an impact and
they're just scattered there. We're not totally sure."
Satellite imagery has spotted large outcroppings of kaolinite in other areas of Mars.
"But until we can actually get to these large outcroppings with the rover, these small rocks are our only on-the-ground
evidence for how these rocks could have formed," Horgan said. "And right now the evidence in these rocks really points
toward these kinds of ancient warmer and wetter environments."
Comparisons to Earth and search for life
Broz compared the Martian kaolinite samples examined by Perseverance with rock samples found in locations near San
Diego, California, and in South Africa. The rocks from the two planets were a close match.
Aside from a rain-heavy tropical climate, Broz said kaolinite on Earth also forms in a hydrothermal system when hot
water is leaching the rock. But that process creates a different chemical signature in the rock than leaching at lower
temperatures by rain over thousands to millions of years. He said datasets from three different sites were used to
compare the hydrothermal leaching scenario to the Mars rocks.
Rocks on Mars, like the kaolinite, are a similar time capsule, potentially holding information from billions of years
ago about the history of environmental conditions on the planet.