EGU2020-22041
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu2020-22041
EGU General Assembly 2020
© Author(s) 2020. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Combining morphological and organic geochemical evidence for investigating putative ichnofossils: A case study for an approach for the detection of fossilised life on Mars

Graham Purvis1, Cees van der Land1, Naoko Sano2, Peter Cumpson3, and Neil Gray1
Graham Purvis et al.
  • 1Newcastle Univerity, School of Earth, Ocean & Planetary Sciences, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
  • 2Ionoptika ltd. Southhampton, UK
  • 3Mark Wainwright Analytical Centre, Univerity of New South Wales, Sydney, Austrailia

The procedures for detecting fossils on Mars can be derived from the methods that are already used in terrestrial paleobiology (Cady et al., 2003). Here fossils preserving regions are visually located, then inspected for morphological features that might imply fossilised biology (Cady and Noffke, 2009; Westall et al., 2015). Morphological evidence of microfossils on its own is not a completely reliable biosignature (García Ruiz et al., 2002).  However, evidence of biological activity may be implanted within the molecular and isotopic composition of organic compounds, which can serve as biosignatures (Summons et al., 2008). Thus, combining both morphological with organo-geochemical evidence could strengthen any argument that a given geological feature could be associated with biological activity. The results from the simultaneous morphological and geochemical analysis of geobiological structures on Earth could provide evidence that any comparable structures that may be observed on Mars, are potentially connected to biological activity, and therefore, may be suitable for collection for return to the Earth, for further analysis.

As a proof of concept, the distribution of the organic material that is associated with distinctive microtubules in the glassy volcaniclastic shards within tuff, that have been suggested to be putative ichnofossils (Banergee and Muehlenbachs, 2003), these were analysed by us using X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, nanoSIMS and the Ionoptika J105 time of flight secondary ion mass spectrometer, with  an argon gas cluster ion beam. This indicated that nitrogenous organic material occurred in regions of the sample that were rich in microtubule textures and in the surrounding microfractures (Sano et al., 2016). 

These results demonstrated that the J105 ToF-SIMS combined with XPS and GC/MS analysis is able to match geomorphological features with their organic and inorganic composition at the µm scale, which may be a useful approach for the identification of fossilised life on Mars.

References:

Banerjee et al., (2003). Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems, 4(4).

Cady et al., (2003). Astrobiology, 3(2), pp.351-368.

Cady et al., (2009). GSA Today, 19(11).

García Ruiz et al., (2002). Astrobiology, 2(3), pp.353-369.

Summons et al., (2008) Astrobiology, 90, 1151–1154.

Westall, F., et al., (2015). Astrobiology, 15(11), pp.998-1029.

Sano, N et al., (2016). J. of Vac Sci & Tech A: 34(4), p.041405

How to cite: Purvis, G., van der Land, C., Sano, N., Cumpson, P., and Gray, N.: Combining morphological and organic geochemical evidence for investigating putative ichnofossils: A case study for an approach for the detection of fossilised life on Mars, EGU General Assembly 2020, Online, 4–8 May 2020, EGU2020-22041, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu2020-22041, 2020

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