Iron‐montmorillonite: A spectral analog of Martian soil
- 15 February 1985
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Geophysical Union (AGU) in Journal of Geophysical Research
- Vol. 90 (S02) , C771-4
- https://doi.org/10.1029/jb090is02p0c771
Abstract
Light absorption and reflectance by smectite clays containing various adsorbed ions were measured in the UV, VIS, and NIR ranges and compared to Martian dust and surface soil spectra. Structural iron in the octahedral sheet of smectites is responsible for a characteristic absorption feature in the UV at 240–260 nm, resulting from an O2−—Fe3+ charge transfer that is similar to one observed in the Martian spectrum. Adsorbed iron affects, via crystal field absorptions, the reflectance of montmorillonite in the VIS and NIR (to 1.3 μm), causing stronger absorption and higher opacity in the wavelength range 0.4–0.6 μm, without developing any specific pronounced absorption feature. In both general appearance and presence of, or lack of, spectral features, the iron‐montmorillonite reflectance spectra in the VIS and NIR are similar to the Martian spectra. At present, however, spectral similarity cannot be used as the sole criterion for constraining Martian mineralogy since several other minerals, other than Fe‐smectites, show sufficient similitude to the Martian spectra; other properties have to be explored and combined to obtain a definitive identification.Keywords
This publication has 19 references indexed in Scilit:
- Simulation of Viking biology experiments suggests smectites not palagonites, as martian soil analoguesNature, 1983
- Characterization of Adsorbed Iron in Montmorillonite by Mössbauer Spectroscopy1Clays and Clay Minerals, 1982
- Fe2+-Fe3+ Transformations in Clay and Resin Ion-Exchange SystemsClays and Clay Minerals, 1980
- The role of structural iron(III) in the UV absorption by smectitesClay Minerals, 1979
- Laboratory simulations of the pyrolytic release experiments: An interim reportJournal of Molecular Evolution, 1979
- Smectite clays in Mars soil: Evidence for their presence and role in Viking biology experimental resultsJournal of Molecular Evolution, 1979
- Scattering by nonspherical particles and optical properties of Martian dustIcarus, 1978
- Mars: Components of infrared spectra and the composition of the dust cloudIcarus, 1973
- Optical Absorption Spectra of Clay MineralsClays and Clay Minerals, 1973
- Optical Study of Particle Size of Montmorillonite with Various Adsorbed CationsNature, 1968