Mineralogy of a Sulfate-rich Inverted Channel in the Atacama Desert, Chile: Clues to its Formation and Preservation
E. Z. Noe Dobrea, R. M. E. Williams, W. E. Dietrich, A. D. Howard, J., C. Cawley, and R. P. Irwin III

TL;DR
This study analyzes a sulfate-rich inverted channel in the Atacama Desert, revealing mineralogical and diagenetic processes that contribute to its preservation, with implications for understanding similar features on Mars.
Contribution
It identifies a new preservation mechanism involving halite-rich cement armoring and links surface features to evaporitic processes and microbial activity.
Findings
Inverted channel formed by anhydrite cementation during diagenesis.
Lateral slopes armored by halite-rich cement after remobilization.
Surface plates show signs of periodic deliquescence and microbial mats.
Abstract
We have performed a stratigraphic and mineralogical analysis of a vertical transect across a ridge located at the distal end of a system of eroded alluvial deposits in the northern Atacama Desert of Chile. The ridge, which is interpreted to be an inverted channel, exhibits a history of sedimentary, evaporitic, and diagenetic origin that includes groundwater mobilization and precipitation of anhydrite cements throughout the volume of the ridge. The ridge consists of two units: a lower one exhibiting a sedimentary and diagenetic history, and an upper one exhibiting an evaporitic history. Interbedded in the section are also anhydritic and gypsic paleosols. Two mechanisms that contribute to channel preservation and inversion are identified in this case. The first mechanism is the cementation of the volume by anhydrite cements during early diagenesis, and the second newly identified…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGeology and Paleoclimatology Research · Planetary Science and Exploration · Methane Hydrates and Related Phenomena
