Discordant K-Ar and young exposure dates for the Windjana sandstone, Kimberley, Gale Crater, Mars

K-Ar and noble gas surface exposure age measurements were carried out on the Windjana sandstone, Kimberley region, Gale Crater, Mars, by using the Sample Analysis at Mars instrument on the Curiosity rover. The sandstone is unusually rich in sanidine, as determined by CheMin X-ray diffraction, contri...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of Geophysical Research: Planets
Main Authors: Vasconcelos, P. M., Farley, K. A., Malespin, C. A., Mahaffy, P., Ming, D., McLennan, S. M., Hurowitz, J. A., Rice, M. S.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Wiley-Blackwell Publishing 2016
Subjects:
3He
Online Access:https://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:414027/UQ414027_OA.pdf
https://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:414027
Description
Summary:K-Ar and noble gas surface exposure age measurements were carried out on the Windjana sandstone, Kimberley region, Gale Crater, Mars, by using the Sample Analysis at Mars instrument on the Curiosity rover. The sandstone is unusually rich in sanidine, as determined by CheMin X-ray diffraction, contributing to the high KO concentration of 3.09 ± 0.20 wt % measured by Alpha-Particle X-ray Spectrometer analysis. A sandstone aliquot heated to ~915°C yielded a K-Ar age of 627 ± 50 Ma. Reheating this aliquot yielded no additional Ar. A second aliquot heated in the same way yielded a much higher K-Ar age of 1710 ± 110 Ma. These data suggest incomplete Ar extraction from a rock with a K-Ar age older than 1710 Ma. Incomplete extraction at ~900°C is not surprising for a rock with a large fraction of K carried by Ar-retentive K-feldspar. Likely, variability in the exact temperature achieved by the sample from run to run, uncertainties in sample mass estimation, and possible mineral fractionation during transport and storage prior to analysis may contribute to these discrepant data. Cosmic ray exposure ages from He and Ne in the two aliquots are minimum values given the possibility of incomplete extraction. However, the general similarity between the He (57 ± 49 and 18 ± 32 Ma, mean 30 Ma) and Ne (2 ± 32 and 83 ± 24 Ma, mean 54 Ma) exposure ages provides no evidence for underextraction. The implied erosion rate at the Kimberley location is similar to that reported at the nearby Yellowknife Bay outcrop.