Level 1 — Absolute Beginner
Scientists have found garnet inside a Martian meteorite for the very first time. A meteorite is a rock from space that has fallen to Earth. This particular rock, called NWA 8171, came from Mars and was discovered in the African desert.
Garnet is a shiny mineral that is often found in rocks on Earth. Finding it in a Martian rock tells scientists that Mars once had very powerful forces deep inside it. Those forces created heat and pressure strong enough to make garnet.
The discovery was published on June 16, 2026. Researchers say it shows Mars had a more complex and active geological history than many people thought. Learning about Mars helps us understand how rocky planets form in our solar system.
- garnet
- a shiny mineral, often red, found in rocks that formed under high heat and pressure
- meteorite
- a rock from space that has landed on Earth
- Mars
- the fourth planet from the Sun, often called the Red Planet
- mineral
- a natural solid substance found in rocks
- pressure
- a pushing force applied to something from all sides
- geological
- relating to the history and structure of the Earth or another planet
- solar system
- the Sun and all the planets, moons, and other objects that orbit it
- discovery
- finding or learning something for the first time
Level 2 — Elementary
Researchers have identified garnet within Martian meteorite NWA 8171, marking the first time the mineral has ever been detected in any rock confirmed to originate from Mars. The study was published in Geochemical Perspectives Letters on June 16, 2026, and was led by Tanya Kizovski of Brock University in Canada and James Darling of the University of Portsmouth in the United Kingdom.
Garnet forms only under conditions of high temperature and high pressure. Its presence in a Martian sample indicates that the region of Mars where the rock originated once experienced extreme geological conditions, either from a large meteorite impact that generated intense shock pressure or from deep magmatic activity beneath the Martian surface.
Beyond the single mineral find, the team concluded that NWA 8171 represents an entirely new type of rock from Mars, unlike any previously catalogued Martian meteorite. The Royal Ontario Museum contributed to the analysis. Scientists say the finding expands the known range of geological processes that shaped the Red Planet.
- meteorite impact
- a collision between a space rock and a planet's surface, releasing enormous energy
- shock pressure
- extremely high pressure created instantly by a violent impact or explosion
- magmatic
- relating to molten rock, called magma, found beneath a planet's surface
- catalogued
- listed and recorded in an organised system
- geological process
- a natural event such as volcanism, erosion, or tectonics that changes a planet's structure
- detect
- to discover or identify the presence of something
- originate
- to come from a particular place or source
- extreme
- far beyond what is typical or expected
Level 3 — Intermediate
A multi-institutional team has confirmed the presence of garnet in Martian meteorite NWA 8171, the first unambiguous detection of this mineral group in any sample of confirmed Martian provenance. Published in Geochemical Perspectives Letters on June 16, 2026, by Tanya Kizovski (Brock University) and James Darling (University of Portsmouth) with contributions from the Royal Ontario Museum, the study characterises NWA 8171 as a lithological type with no precedent in the Martian meteorite collection.
Garnet stability fields require pressures above roughly 1.5 GPa and temperatures exceeding 600 degrees Celsius, conditions that do not arise in standard igneous or sedimentary Martian environments. The researchers propose two formation scenarios: transient shock metamorphism generated by a hypervelocity impactor, which can locally achieve pressures exceeding 30 GPa, or sustained deep-crustal metamorphism during an early phase of Martian thermal evolution when geothermal gradients were steeper and mantle convection more vigorous.
The identification reframes understanding of Martian crustal diversity. Previous meteorite classifications divided Martian samples into shergottites, nakhlites, and chassignites, with occasional ungrouped outliers. NWA 8171 does not fit any of these categories. Its mineralogy implies that the Martian crust harbours lithologies formed under pressure-temperature regimes that existing sample collections have not sampled. Planetary scientists argue that returned samples from targeted high-pressure terrains, possibly identified through orbital spectroscopy, could further test whether garnet-bearing assemblages are localised anomalies or a hidden widespread component of the Martian interior.
- lithological
- relating to the physical characteristics and composition of rock types
- shock metamorphism
- rock transformation caused by the extreme pressure and temperature of a meteorite impact
- geothermal gradient
- the rate at which temperature increases with depth inside a planet
- shergottite
- the most common type of Martian meteorite, formed from volcanic basaltic rock
- hypervelocity
- moving at extremely high speeds, typically above several kilometres per second
- mantle convection
- the slow circulation of hot rock in a planet's mantle that drives geological activity
- orbital spectroscopy
- analysis of a planet's surface minerals from orbit using reflected light wavelengths
- provenance
- the origin or source of a rock or artefact
Level 4 — Advanced
The confirmation of a garnet-bearing assemblage in NWA 8171, a Martian meteorite of previously unclassified lithology, constitutes a significant constraint on models of Martian crustal evolution and impact history. Reported in Geochemical Perspectives Letters (Kizovski et al., June 16, 2026), the identification relies on electron microprobe analysis and micro-X-ray diffraction to characterise a grossular-andradite solid solution garnet coexisting with pyroxene and plagioclase in a matrix inconsistent with known SNC meteorite parageneses.
Phase equilibria calculations constrain garnet crystallisation to the high-pressure granulite facies or eclogite-transitional domain, requiring lithostatic pressures of 1.5 to 2.5 GPa and temperatures of 650 to 900 degrees Celsius. For a 45-km mean crustal thickness model of early Mars, such conditions would be achievable at the base of thickened crust in the Noachian-era highlands, where a steeper geothermal gradient (~20 K/km at 4 Ga versus ~7 K/km today) could sustain granulite-facies metamorphism without implying plate tectonism. Alternatively, transient peak shock pressures above 20 GPa from a large Noachian impactor would carry the assemblage through the garnet stability field on microsecond timescales, consistent with the partial melt textures observed in NWA 8171.
The finding has direct relevance to the Martian water budget and redox evolution. Garnet-grade metamorphism at depth requires aqueous or volatile-rich fluid percolation to catalyse recrystallisation, implying that hydrothermal systems penetrated significantly deeper into the Noachian crust than surface mineralogy alone suggests. If garnet assemblages are a hidden widespread lithology, their weathering at the Martian surface would release Ca, Fe, and Al into regolith and impact-melt sheets, affecting interpretations of secondary mineralogy observed by orbital infrared spectrometers such as CRISM on MRO and OMEGA on Mars Express. Mission planners for Mars Sample Return and future landed assets may need to prioritise the ancient highland terrains as high-value targets for understanding the full range of Martian crustal differentiation.
- grossular-andradite
- a solid-solution garnet series ranging from calcium-aluminium to calcium-iron end members
- granulite facies
- a metamorphic regime characterised by high temperature and pressure, typically occurring deep in continental crust
- SNC meteorite
- Shergottite-Nakhlite-Chassignite: the three main classes of Martian meteorites
- paragenesis
- the sequence in which minerals in a rock crystallised together
- lithostatic pressure
- pressure exerted by the weight of overlying rock at a given depth
- CRISM
- Compact Reconnaissance Imaging Spectrometer for Mars, an instrument on the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter
- regolith
- the layer of loose fragmented material covering the solid rock of a planet