Physics
Scientific paper
Jan 1980
adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-data_query?bibcode=1980phdt........11s&link_type=abstract
Ph.D. Thesis Hawaii Univ., Honolulu. Dept. of Earth and Planetary Science.
Physics
3
Chemical Composition, Mars Surface, Planetary Geology, Rocks, Basalt, Data Acquisition, Dust, Iron Oxides, Olivine, Pyroxenes, Spectral Reflectance, Spectrophotometry, Weathering
Scientific paper
Near infrared telescopic spectrophotometry for dark regions is present and interpreted using laboratory studies of iron bearing mineral mixtures and terrestrial oxidized and unoxidized basalts. Upon closer inspection (by spacecraft) the telescopic dark regions were found to consist of large scale intermixtures of bright soil (aeolian dust) and dark materials. The dark materials themselves consist of an intimate physical association of very fine grained ferric oxide bearing material with relatively high near infrared reflectance and darker, relatively unoxidized rocks or rock fragments. While these two components could exist finely intermixed in a soil, a number of lines of evidence indicate that the usual occurrence is probably a thin coating of physically bound oxidized material. The coated rocks are dark and generally clinopyroxene bearing. The shallow band depths and low overall reflectances indicate that opaque minerals such as magnetite are probably abundant.
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