Earth garnet has a glowing red hue. Mars garnet is a little... different. (Minakryn Ruslan/iStock/Getty Images Plus) Earth garnet has a glowing red hue. Mars garnet is a little... different. (Minakryn Ruslan/iStock/Getty Images Plus)

Scientists cracked open a Mars meteorite and found a big surprise

Cracking open a meteorite that landed on Earth from Mars has yielded an unexpected treasure.

Hidden inside a fragment of rock, scientists found a few grains of garnet – a mineral that has never before been found in a Martian sample.

This tiny speck raises some enormous questions.

On Earth, garnet often forms under conditions involving intense heat, pressure, or chemical alteration. The right set of conditions for garnet has never been identified on Mars.

So this meteorite, which is stored in the Royal Ontario Museum's collection, has some explaining to do.

Did the garnet inside it form on Mars? If it did, what process produced it, and when?

And if it didn't, where did it come from, and how did it get to Mars?

"This discovery is going to expand our knowledge of the geologic processes that are possible on this planet," says planetary geologist Tanya Kizovski of Brock University in Canada.

"This new garnet-bearing rock type could give us clues to how Mars has changed throughout its history and new insights into the ancient environments that could have formed the garnet and related minerals."

When we think of garnets, we tend to think of the form of the mineral highly prized for its deep, blood-red hue.

The Martian version looks nothing like that.

Like many minerals, garnet doesn't always look the way we might expect. In particular, one iron-rich form of garnet known as andradite is often more of a yellowy-greeny color that is very similar to other minerals often found in meteorites, and doesn't stand out in the same way.

Andradite can have an olive hue. (Robert M. Lavinsky/iRocks.com, CC-BY-SA-3.0)Andradite can have an olive hue. (Robert M. Lavinsky/iRocks.com, CC-BY-SA-3.0)

For this reason, the researchers nearly missed their discovery.

"This little section of the meteorite looked really interesting, and the chemistry was a bit odd," Kizovski says.

"At first, we assumed it was a mineral called pyroxene, which is very common, but then we decided to take a second look."

Those follow-up analyses confirmed that the mineral was andradite. Just a few grains were found in a tiny rock fragment measuring roughly 0.8 by 0.5 millimeters – smaller than a poppy seed.

Chemical maps of the garnet-bearing fragment. (Kizovski et al., Geochem. Perspect. Lett., 2026)Chemical maps of the garnet-bearing fragment. (Kizovski et al., Geochem. Perspect. Lett., 2026)

The meteorite, named NWA 8171, is already of intense interest to planetary scientists.

It consists of basaltic breccia – a type of rock that forms when magma cools and hardens around other blobs of mineral.

Its composition is a bit like a fruitcake, where the basalt is the doughy cake, and the other mineral inclusions are the fruits and nuts.

Between the basalt and its inclusions, NWA 8171 has a lot to say about Martian geology, from ancient magma flows to whatever information may be locked inside the grains.

This is what makes the discovery of garnet in NWA 8171 so exciting – because these minerals are particularly superb storytellers.

Garnets preserve excellent records of past geological processes, retaining unique snapshots of the temperature and pressure conditions under which they formed. They can also be used to date the timeline of these conditions, and often contain traces of other minerals that can reveal the chemistry of their formation environment.

The researchers don't yet know what that formation environment looked like, whether it involved an unusual type of magma not yet found on Mars, or whether the process was a metamorphic one.

"Garnet is a classic example of a mineral often found in metamorphic rocks on Earth. The process of metamorphism transforms igneous or sedimentary rocks into a new form through exposure to extreme heat, high pressure, or hot fluids," Kizovski explains.

"On Mars, the heat and pressure needed to produce garnet through metamorphism could have come from the impact of a meteorite hitting the surface of Mars, magma rising up into the Martian crust, or both."

REGISTER NOW

By Michelle Starr / Science Alert Senior Journalist

Michelle Starr is a Senior Journalist at ScienceAlert; her deep love and curiosity for the cosmos has made the publication a world leader in reporting developments in space research.

She is an award-winning journalist with over 15 years of experience in the science and technology sectors. Prior to joining the ScienceAlert team in 2017, she worked for seven years at CNET, where she created the role of Science Editor.

Her work has appeared in The Best Australian Science Writing 2018 and 2020 anthologies, and in 2014, she was awarded the Best Consumer Technology Journalist in the Optus IT Journalism Awards.

She absolutely adores orcas, corvids, and octopuses, and would be quite content to welcome any of them as the new overlords of Earth.

Twitter: @riding_red

(Source: sciencealert.com; June 18, 2026; https://tinyurl.com/28qpmfwb)
Back to INF

Loading please wait...