Published July 2, 2025 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Carbonate formation and fluctuating habitability on Mars

  • 1. University of Chicago
  • 2. University of Calgary
  • 3. NASA Goddard Space Flight Center
  • 4. NASA Ames Research Center
  • 5. California Institute of Technology
  • 6. Brown University

Description

The cause of Mars's loss of surface habitability is unclear, with isotopic data suggesting a 'missing sink' of carbonate. Past climates with surface and shallow-subsurface liquid water are recorded by Mars's sedimentary rocks, including strata in the approximately 4-km-thick record at Gale Crater. Those waters were intermittent, spatially patchy and discontinuous, and continued remarkably late in Mars's history—attributes that can be understood if, as on Earth, sedimentary-rock formation sequestered carbon dioxide as abundant carbonate (recently confirmed in situ at Gale). Here we show that a negative feedback among solar luminosity, liquid water and carbonate formation can explain the existence of intermittent Martian oases. In our model, increasing solar luminosity promoted the stability of liquid water, which in turn formed carbonate, reduced the partial pressure of atmospheric carbon dioxide and limited liquid water. Chaotic orbital forcing modulated wet–dry cycles. The negative feedback restricted liquid water to oases and Mars self-regulated as a desert planet. We model snowmelt as the water source, but the feedback can also work with groundwater as the water source. Model output suggests that Gale faithfully records the expected primary episodes of liquid water stability in the surface and near-surface environment. Eventually, atmospheric thickness approaches water's triple point, curtailing the sustained stability of liquid water and thus habitability in the surface environment. We assume that the carbonate content found at Gale is representative, and as a result we present a testable idea rather than definitive evidence.

Data availability

All data are available through the NASA Planetary Data System (https://pds.nasa.gov/). The topographic contours on the maps shown in Fig. 3, and Extended Data Figs. 1 and 8 are made using MATLAB from publicly available Mars Orbiter Laser Altimeter gridded records (https://pds-geosciences.wustl.edu/missions/mgs/megdr.html).

Our Mars climate evolution model code, together with our analysis scripts, is open-sourced on Zenodo at https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.11489512 (ref. 117).

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Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.1038/s41586-025-09161-1
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:15646

Funding

NASA
NNX16AG55G
NASA
80NSSC20K0144
NASA
80NSSC22K0731

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Physical Sciences Division
Department(s)
Geophysical Sciences