After arriving at Gediz Vallis channel, NASA’s Curiosity Mars rover captured this 360-degree panorama using one of its black-and-white navigation cameras on Feb. 3. The formation has scientists intrigued because of what it might tell them about the history of water on the Red Planet. NASA/JPL-Caltech
The rover has arrived at an area that may show evidence liquid water flowed
on this part of Mars for much longer than previously thought.
NASA’s Curiosity rover has begun
exploring a new region of Mars, one that could reveal more about when liquid
water disappeared once and for all from the Red Planet’s surface. Billions of
years ago, Mars was much wetter and probably warmer than it is today. Curiosity
is getting a new look into that more Earth-like past as it drives along and
eventually crosses the Gediz Vallis channel, a winding, snake-like feature that
– from space, at least – appears to have been carved by an ancient river.
That possibility has scientists intrigued. The rover team is searching for evidence that would confirm how the channel was carved into the underlying bedrock. The formation’s sides are steep enough that the team doesn’t think the channel was made by wind. However, debris flows (rapid, wet landslides) or a river carrying rocks and sediment could have had enough energy to chisel into the bedrock. After the channel formed, it was filled with boulders and other debris. Scientists are also eager to learn whether this material was transported by debris flows or dry avalanches.
Pan around inside this 360-degree video to see
Gediz Vallis channel from the point of view of NASA’s Curiosity Mars rover. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech
Since 2014, Curiosity has been
ascending the foothills of Mount Sharp, which stands 3 miles (5 kilometers)
above the floor of Gale Crater. The layers in this lower part of the mountain
formed over millions of years amid a changing Martian climate, providing
scientists with a way to study how the presence of both water and the chemical
ingredients required for life changed over time.
For example, a lower part of those
foothills included a layer rich in clay minerals where a lot of water once interacted with rock. Now the rover is
exploring a layer enriched with sulfates – salty minerals that often form as water evaporates.
Revising Mount
Sharp’s Timeline
It will take months to fully explore the channel, and what scientists learn could revise the timeline for the mountain’s formation.
The steep path NASA’s Curiosity Mars rover took to reach Gediz Vallis channel is indicated in yellow in this visualization made with orbital data. At lower right is the point where the rover veered off to get an up-close look at a ridge formed long ago by debris flows from higher up on Mount Sharp. NASA/JPL-Caltech/UC Berkeley
Once the sedimentary layers of lower Mount Sharp had been deposited by wind
and water, erosion whittled them down to expose the layers visible today. Only
after these lengthy processes – as well as intensely dry periods during which
the surface of Mount Sharp was a sandy desert – could the Gediz Vallis channel
have been carved.
Scientists think the boulders and
other debris that subsequently filled the channel came from high up on the
mountain, where Curiosity will never go, giving the team a glimpse of what
kinds of material may be up there.
“If the channel or the debris pile
were formed by liquid water, that’s really interesting. It would mean that
fairly late in the story of Mount Sharp – after a long dry period – water came
back, and in a big way,” said Curiosity’s project scientist, Ashwin Vasavada of
NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California.
That explanation would be
consistent with one of the most surprising discoveries Curiosity has made while
driving up Mount Sharp: Water seems to have come and gone in phases, rather
than gradually disappearing as the planet grew drier. These cycles can be seen
in evidence of mud cracks; shallow, salty lakes; and, directly below the channel, cataclysmic debris flows that piled up to create the sprawling Gediz
Vallis ridge.
Last year, Curiosity made a
challenging ascent to study the ridge, which drapes across the slopes of Mount
Sharp and seems to grow out of the end of the channel, suggesting both are part
of one geologic system.
Viewing the
Channel Up Close
Curiosity documented the channel
with a 360-degree black-and-white panorama from the rover’s left navigation
camera. Taken on Feb. 3 (the 4,086th Martian day, or sol, of the mission), the
image shows the dark sand that fills one side of the channel and a debris pile
rising just behind the sand. In the opposite direction is the steep slope that Curiosity climbed to reach this area.
The rover takes these kinds of
panoramas with its navigation cameras at the end of each drive. Now the science
team is relying on the navcams even more while engineers try to resolve an issue that is limiting the use of one imager belonging to the color Mast
Camera, or Mastcam.
More About the
Mission
Curiosity was built by JPL, which
is managed by Caltech in Pasadena, California. JPL leads the mission on behalf
of NASA’s Science Mission Directorate in Washington.
For more about Curiosity, visit: https://mars.nasa.gov/msl
Source: NASA’s Curiosity Searches for New Clues About Mars’ Ancient Water - NASA
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