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Diverse organic-mineral associations in Jezero crater, Mars.

Sunanda SharmaRyan D RoppelAshley E MurphyLuther W BeegleRohit BhartiaAndrew SteeleJoseph Razzell HollisSandra SiljeströmFrancis M McCubbinSanford A AsherWilliam J AbbeyAbigail C AllwoodEve L BergerBenjamin L BleefeldAaron S BurtonSergei V BykovEmily L CardarelliPamela G ConradAndrea CorpolongoAndrew D CzajaLauren P DeFloresKenneth EdgettKenneth A FarleyTeresa FornaroAllison C FoxMarc D FriesDavid HarkerKeyron Hickman-LewisJoshua HuggettSamara ImbeahRyan S JakubekLinda C KahCarina LeeYang LiuAngela MageeMichelle MinittiKelsey R MooreAlyssa PascuzzoCarolina Rodriguez Sanchez-VahamondeEva L SchellerSvetlana ShkolyarKathryn M StackKim SteadmanMichael TuiteKyle UckertAlyssa WerynskiRoger C WiensAmy J WilliamsKatherine WinchellMegan R KennedyAnastasia Yanchilina
Published in: Nature (2023)
The presence and distribution of preserved organic matter on the surface of Mars can provide key information about the Martian carbon cycle and the potential of the planet to host life throughout its history. Several types of organic molecules have been previously detected in Martian meteorites 1 and at Gale crater, Mars 2-4 . Evaluating the diversity and detectability of organic matter elsewhere on Mars is important for understanding the extent and diversity of Martian surface processes and the potential availability of carbon sources 1,5,6 . Here we report the detection of Raman and fluorescence spectra consistent with several species of aromatic organic molecules in the Máaz and Séítah formations within the Crater Floor sequences of Jezero crater, Mars. We report specific fluorescence-mineral associations consistent with many classes of organic molecules occurring in different spatial patterns within these compositionally distinct formations, potentially indicating different fates of carbon across environments. Our findings suggest there may be a diversity of aromatic molecules prevalent on the Martian surface, and these materials persist despite exposure to surface conditions. These potential organic molecules are largely found within minerals linked to aqueous processes, indicating that these processes may have had a key role in organic synthesis, transport or preservation.
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