If looking at this Marsvista conjures up childhood memories of the song, "One of these things is not like the others," NASAscientists are right there with you.
Perseverance, a car-size lab on six wheels, traveled into the Red Planet's Neretva Vallis last week. Though this region may look like a barren desert, it was once an ancient river channel that fed into the Jezero crater billions of years ago.
As Perseverance traversed the inlet, the rover came upon a hill covered in boulders, with one in particular attracting the science team's attention: a light speckled rock amid a sea of dark lumps.
"Every once in a while, you'll just see some strange thing in the Martian landscape, and the team is like, 'Oh, let's go over there,'" Katie Stack Morgan, deputy project scientist of NASA's Mars 2020 mission, told Mashable. "This was like the textbook definition of (chasing) the bright, shiny thing because it was so bright and white."
The boulder is so exceptional, scientists have said it's in a league of its own. Closer analysis with the rover's instruments shows it is likely an anorthosite, a rock type never seen before while exploring Mars, Stack Morgan said, though there have been signs such rocks should exist. Not even the Curiosity rover, which has observed more variety in Gale Crater, has seen one quite like this.
SEE ALSO: How scientists revealed a new Martian rock type without the rockThough such anorthosite rocks are on the moon and in mountain ranges on Earth, they're generally considered rare in the solar system. True Martian examples have eluded researchers, including within our planet's inventory of Red Planet meteoritesthat traveled through spaceto get here.
This discovery could bolster the idea that Mars' early crust was way more complex than once thought — and perhaps similar to Earth's original crust. Understanding the ancient Martian crust also could help unlock secrets about the evolution of Earth and how life emerged here.
"This was like the textbook definition of (chasing) the bright, shiny thing."
The rover team named the special boulder, about 18 inches wide and 14 inches tall, "Atoco Point" after a landmark in the Grand Canyon.
"Seeing a rock like Atoco Point is one of these hints that, yes, we do have anorthosites on Mars, and this might be a sampling of that lower crust material," Stack Morgan said. "If we see it later on in the context of other rocks, it can give us a sense for how the earliest crust of Mars kind of came to be."
Anorthosites are predominantly made of feldspar, a mineral linked to lava flows. Feldspars are more rich in silica than basalts and some of the last stuff to crystallize out of magma. On the other hand, basalts, dark volcanic rocks rich in iron and magnesium, are ubiquitous on Mars' surface.
Many of Perseverance's scientists think magma below the surface made the minerals in Atoko Point, and that a giant impact on Mars may have excavated the rock to the surface, a chunk later falling from the crater rim to its present site. Others think the boulder was made somewhere else far away and a gushing ancient river carried it there.
Whether scientists will ever get their hands on this rock or one like it remains to be seen. Perseverance has been collecting samplesfrom Jezero crater since 2021. The region, an ancient dried delta, is one where scientists think microscopic organisms might have existed long ago. But the plan to fly rocks and dust grains to Earth, a complex mission called Mars Sample Return, is in jeopardy. Its rising costs have led to layoffs and warnings of cancellation from Congress. The agency is now making a desperate pleafor ideas to save the mission.
Perhaps surprisingly, the rover team chose to drive away from Atoco Point without even taking a sample, despite its significance. That's because the team hopes to discover many more like it in a couple of months when the rover reaches the crater rim. Finding examples from its original location could provide the scientists with a lot more context.
"We said, 'OK, let's keep this rock in mind,'" Stack Morgan said. "'Maybe we'll come back here if we don't find this elsewhere in the crater rim.'"
Copyright © 2023 Powered by
NASA rover discovers mysterious Mars boulder unlike any others-燕尔新婚网
sitemap
文章
2
浏览
2
获赞
22
This alignment test will tell you if you're a stupid horny baby
People online love a good alignment test. They also love to say "I'm baby." Here's something that coWebb telescope snaps view of an exploded star. It's an invaluable find.
The James Webb Space Telescope's latest psychedelic view reveals an exploded star.But this supernovaApple's watchOS 7.6.1 update includes a crucial security fix
It's time for another update... and not the fun kind.If you've received a notification for watchOS 7YouTube cofounder protests decision to remove 'dislikes'
When YouTube announced it was removingthe "dislike" count from all videos on its platform last week,iPhone 12 might look like an iPad Pro, and the HomePod could shrink
Apple is reportedly giving its iPhone lineup a complete revamp. According to Bloomberg, unnamed souScientists hunted for planets around our cosmic neighbor. They found 4.
Barnard's Star, just some 6 light-years away, has intrigued astronomers for over a century.Does theSpaceX Starship explodes during Herculean attempt to blast into space
SpaceX's first attempt at launching its enormous, powerful Starship on an uncrewed test flight in spSolar eclipse glasses: Shop these options at Amazon that will arrive before Saturday
If you missed the lunar eclipse earlier this month, the sky has another treat in store for certain pComedian gives her family brilliant informational pamphlets before going on a date
Anticipating her family's inevitable questions, Mary Beth Barone prepared an informational pamphletNASA's Voyager is in hostile territory. It's 'dodging bullets.'
NASA's Voyager craft have ventured where no other human machines have ever gone — the space beMysterious U.S. spaceplane returns to Earth, and Space Force snaps photos
The secretive exploits of the X-37B spaceplane continue. After spending 434 days in space, the crewlYouTube cofounder protests decision to remove 'dislikes'
When YouTube announced it was removingthe "dislike" count from all videos on its platform last week,12 interesting gadgets to spice up your self
May is National Masturbation Month, and we're celebrating with Feeling Yourself, a series exploringScientists are collecting pee from SpaceX travelers. There's a good reason.
Jay Buckey flew to space as a NASA astronaut in 1998. Decades later, he watched one of his experimenThe planets Venus and Mars are amazing in June, and you should look up
It's a superb time to view our quirky planetary neighbors Venus and Mars.June 2023 brings a number o