The meteorite NWA 7034 has been shown to be a 4.4 billion-year-old chunk of the Martian crust.
Spectroscopic measurements of the meteorite are a spot-on match with orbital measurements of the Martian dark plains, areas where the planet's coating of red dust is thin and the rocks beneath are exposed, researchers said.
The findings suggest that the meteorite, nicknamed Black Beauty, is representative of the "bulk background" of rocks on the Martian surface, said Kevin Cannon, a Brown University graduate student and lead author of the new paper.
Before Black Beauty, all the Martian rocks found on Earth were classified as SNC meteorites (shergottites, nakhlites, or chassignites).
They're mainly igneous rocks made of cooled volcanic material. But Black Beauty is a breccia, a mashup of different rock types welded together in a basaltic matrix.
It contains sedimentary components that match the chemical makeup of rocks analysed by the Mars rovers.
Scientists concluded that it is a piece of Martian crust - the first such sample to make it to Earth.
After acquiring a chip of Black Beauty from Carl Agee from the University of New Mexico, Cannon and Mustard used a variety of spectroscopic techniques to analyse it.
"What we wanted to do was get an average for the entire sample. That overall measurement was what ended up matching the orbital data," said Cannon.
Researchers said the spectral match helps put a face on the dark plains, suggesting that the regions are dominated by brecciated rocks similar to Black Beauty.
"Mars is punctured by over 400,000 impact craters greater than 1 km in diameter. Because brecciation is a natural consequence of impacts, it is expected that material similar to NWA 7034 has accumulated on Mars over time," they said.
In other words, Mustard said, the bulk of rocks on the surface of Mars probably look a lot like Black Beauty: "dark, messy and beautiful.
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