Timing of crustal reworking on Mars inferred from the Lu-Hf isotope systematics of igneous clasts in NWA 7533OPEN ACCESS 

Ninna K. Jensen, Alexander A. Nemchin, Gavin Kenny, Martin J. Whitehouse, James N. Connelly, Takashi Mikouchi, Martin Bizzarro

Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta
In Press, Journal Pre-proof, Available online 19 November 2024

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“Impact events were frequent in the early history of our Solar System, and the dynamics of planetary crust formation were, consequently, substantially different from the processes that dominate today. Mars, a planet with stagnant lid tectonics and a unique preservation of ancient surface terrains, provides an outstanding opportunity to investigate the early processes related to the formation and reshaping of the first crust. Northwest Africa (NWA) 7034 and paired meteorites (such as NWA 7533) are fragments of polymict, regolith breccia that provide a tangible record of the ancient, brecciated crust on Mars. Zircon and baddeleyite from NWA 7034/7533 record evidence for two events of intense crustal reworking at 4442 ± 17 and 4474 ± 10 million years ago (Ma) triggered by impacts, placing important constraints on the timing and the dynamics of early crust formation on Mars. To date, only few studies have focussed on the geochronology of the igneous clasts present within NWA 7034 and its pairs. Although these studies consistently report ancient ages (∼4.4 Ga) for basaltic, basaltic andesitic and monzonitic clasts, the associated precisions are generally too low to link the different lithologies with the two age peaks inferred from NWA 7034/7533 zircon and baddeleyite. Here, we conduct an isotopic and petrographic study of igneous clasts from NWA 7533 to shed further light on the timing and nature of crustal reworking in the early history of Mars. We show that six out of seven investigated igneous clasts, representing at least four distinct types, record undisturbed Lu-Hf isotope systematics that indicate contemporaneous formation. Together with two zircons hosted in basalt and basaltic andesite clasts, these igneous clasts yield an isochron age of 4440 ± 41 Ma (2SE, MSWD = 2.1). This isochron age is consistent with clast ages inferred from zircon U-Pb geochronology, and altogether the available age constraints for the lithic components in NWA 7533 indicate that they derive from the younger of the two peaks of intense crustal reworking on early Mars (4442 ± 17 Ma). The initial εHf values (the 176Hf/177Hf ratio in the sample normalised to that of the chondritic uniform reservoir at the time of crystallisation in parts per ten thousand) of the igneous clasts range between −2.07 and −0.74, consistent with crystallisation from enriched source melts deriving from impact-induced reworking of the crust. The mean Lu-Hf isotope composition of the igneous clasts constrains the timing of primordial crust formation and reveal planet formation and differentiation within the first 10 Myr of the history of the Solar System, in consistence with the conclusions in earlier reports. The results presented here suggest a 176Lu/177Hf ratio of ∼ 0.0135 or higher in the primordial martian crust”