The greatest place to be a Martian: Australia?

Report this content

Would Martians feel at home in Australia? Recent research has proven that if Martians took a holiday to Australia they might feel more at home than you’d think. Associate Professor Patrice F. Rey (University of Sydney) has recently exposed a unique set of attributes suggesting that the Australian red centre could be a close analogue for the surface of the red planet – and how this unusual weathering has led to the formation of Australia’s opals.

Precious opal, Australia’s national gemstone, has been mined from the red dirt of central Australia for over a century. Its formation at shallow depths, and why it can be found in central Australia - yet hardly anywhere else on Earth - has remained a mystery.  In this recent paper published in the Australian Journal of Earth Sciences, Associate Professor Patrice Rey, from the University’s School of Geosciences, explains that the formation of Australian opal was due to an extraordinary episode of acidic weathering during the drying out of the central Australian landscape that followed the regression of the Eromanga Sea 100 years ago. 

On Earth, regional acidic weathering is rare. Interestingly, acidic oxidative weathering has been documented at the surface of Mars, which shares an intriguing set of attributes with the Great Artesian Basin. These attributes include similar sandstones, a long episode of drying out leading to the formation of clay and opaline silica, and last but not least the same surface colour.  This latest research suggests that the Australian red centre could well be the best regional terrestrial analogue for the surface of the red planet. Could it be that Australia may be home to Martians in the not too distant future?

Read the full article online: http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/08120099.2013.784219

Visit our newsroom at: http://www.tandfonline.com/page/press-releases 

Follow us on Twitter @tandfnewsroom

Australian Journal of Earth Sciences publishes peer-reviewed research papers as well as significant review articles of general interest to geoscientists. Australian Journal of Earth Sciences is part of the Earth Sciences journals portfolio published by Taylor & Francis, a leading, globally-recognised academic publisher.  If you would like to find out more about the journal, visit the journal homepage today.  Here you will find the latest news, offers and free access.

About the Author: Patrice was a schoolboy in southern France, when Australia appeared to him through his black and white TV. The documentary was about opal mining in Coober Pedy.  Thirty years later, a phone call from the Lightning Ridge opal Miners Association, reconnected Patrice, then a geologist at the University of Sydney, with his childhood memory. The first science-based model for the formation of precious opal was made possible thanks to the resolve of the LRMA and a research grant from the Australian Research Council.

-----------------------------------------
About Taylor & Francis Group
-----------------------------------------

Taylor & Francis Group partners with researchers, scholarly societies, universities and libraries worldwide to bring knowledge to life.  As one of the world’s leading publishers of scholarly journals, books, ebooks and reference works our content spans all areas of Humanities, Social Sciences, Behavioural Sciences, Science, and Technology and Medicine.

From our network of offices in Oxford, New York, Philadelphia, Boca Raton, Boston, Melbourne, Singapore, Beijing, Tokyo, Stockholm, New Delhi and Johannesburg, Taylor & Francis staff provide local expertise and support to our editors, societies and authors and tailored, efficient customer service to our library colleagues.

For more information please contact:
Sally Day
Taylor & Francis Journals
sally.day@tandf.co.uk

Tags: