Citation

BibTex format

@article{Westall:2011:10.1016/j.pss.2010.09.006,
author = {Westall, F and Foucher, F and Cavalazzi, B and de, Vries ST and Nijman, W and Pearson, V and Watson, J and Verchovsky, A and Wright, I and Rouzaud, JN and Marchesini, D},
doi = {10.1016/j.pss.2010.09.006},
journal = {Planetary and Space Science},
pages = {1093--1106},
title = {Volcaniclastic habitats for early life on Earth and Mars: A case study from ~3.5 Ga-old rocks from the Pilbara, Australia},
url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.pss.2010.09.006},
volume = {59},
year = {2011}
}

RIS format (EndNote, RefMan)

TY  - JOUR
AB - Within the context of present and future in situ missions to Mars to investigate its habitability and to search for traces of life, we studied the habitability and traces of past life in similar to 3.5 Ga-old volcanic sands deposited in littoral environments an analogue to Noachian environments on Mars. The environmental conditions on Noachian Mars (4.1-3.7 Ga) and the Early Archaean (4.0-3.3 Ga) Earth were, in many respects, similar: presence of liquid water, dense CO(2) atmosphere, availability of carbon and bioessential elements, and availability of energy. For this reason, information contained in Early Archaean terrestrial rocks concerning habitable conditions (on a microbial scale) and traces of past life are of relevance in defining strategies to be used to identify past habitats and past life on Mars. One such example is the 3.446 Ga-old Kitty's Gap Chert in the Pilbara Craton, NW. Australia. This formation consists of volcanic sediments deposited in a coastal mudflat environment and is thus a relevant analogue for sediments deposited in shallow water environments on Noachian Mars. Two main types of habitat are represented, a volcanic (lithic) habitat and planar stabilized sediment surfaces in sunlit shallow waters. The sediments hosted small (<1 mu m in size) microorganisms that formed colonies on volcanic particle surfaces and in pore waters within the volcanic sediments, as well as biofilms on stabilised sediment surfaces. The microorganisms included coccoids, filaments and rare rod-shaped organisms associated with microbial polymer (EPS). The preserved microbial community was apparently dominated by chemotrophic organisms but some locally transported filaments and filamentous mat fragments indicate that possibly photosynthetic mats formed nearby. Both microorganisms and sediments were silicified during very early diagenesis. There are no macroscopic traces of fossilised life in these volcanic sediments and sophisticated instrumentation and specialized
AU - Westall,F
AU - Foucher,F
AU - Cavalazzi,B
AU - de,Vries ST
AU - Nijman,W
AU - Pearson,V
AU - Watson,J
AU - Verchovsky,A
AU - Wright,I
AU - Rouzaud,JN
AU - Marchesini,D
DO - 10.1016/j.pss.2010.09.006
EP - 1106
PY - 2011///
SP - 1093
TI - Volcaniclastic habitats for early life on Earth and Mars: A case study from ~3.5 Ga-old rocks from the Pilbara, Australia
T2 - Planetary and Space Science
UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.pss.2010.09.006
VL - 59
ER -