Use your mouse to explore this 360-degree view of
Gediz Vallis channel, a region of Mars that NASA’s Curiosity rover surveyed
before heading west to new adventures. NASA/JPL-Caltech/MSSS
The rover captured a 360-degree
panorama before leaving Gediz Vallis channel, a feature it’s been exploring for
the past year.
NASA’s Curiosity rover is preparing
for the next leg of its journey, a monthslong trek to a formation called the
boxwork, a set of weblike patterns on Mars’ surface that stretches for miles.
It will soon leave behind Gediz Vallis channel, an area wrapped in mystery. How
the channel formed so late during a transition to a drier climate is one big
question for the science team. Another mystery is the field of white sulfur
stones the rover discovered over the summer.
Curiosity imaged the stones, along
with features from inside the channel, in a 360-degree panorama before driving
up to the western edge of the channel at the end of September.
The rover is searching for evidence
that ancient Mars had the right ingredients to support microbial life, if any
formed billions of years ago, when the Red Planet held lakes and rivers.
Located in the foothills of Mount Sharp, a 3-mile-tall (5-kilometer-tall)
mountain, Gediz Vallis channel may help tell a related story: what the area was like as water was disappearing on
Mars. Although older layers on the mountain had already formed in a dry
climate, the channel suggests that water occasionally coursed through the area
as the climate was changing.
Scientists are still piecing together the processes that formed various features within the channel, including the debris mound nicknamed “Pinnacle Ridge,” visible in the new 360-degree panorama. It appears that rivers, wet debris flows, and dry avalanches all left their mark. The science team is now constructing a timeline of events from Curiosity’s observations.
NASA’s Curiosity captured this panorama using its
Mastcam while heading west away from Gediz Vallis channel on Nov. 2, 2024, the
4,352nd Martian day, or sol, of the mission. The Mars rover’s tracks across the
rocky terrain are visible at right.
NASA/JPL-Caltech/MSSS
The science team is also trying to answer some big questions about the
sprawling field of sulfur stones. Images of the area from NASA’s Mars
Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO) showed what looked like an unremarkable patch of light-colored terrain.
It turns out that the sulfur stones were too small for MRO’s High-Resolution
Imaging Science Experiment (HiRISE) to see, and Curiosity’s team was intrigued to find
them when the rover reached the patch. They were even more surprised after
Curiosity rolled over one of the stones, crushing it to reveal yellow crystals inside.
Science instruments on the rover
confirmed the stone was pure sulfur — something no mission has seen before on
Mars. The team doesn’t have a ready explanation for why the sulfur formed
there; on Earth, it’s associated with volcanoes and hot springs, and no
evidence exists on Mount Sharp pointing to either of those causes.
“We looked at the sulfur field from every angle — from the top and the side — and looked for anything mixed with the sulfur that might give us clues as to how it formed. We’ve gathered a ton of data, and now we have a fun puzzle to solve,” said Curiosity’s project scientist Ashwin Vasavada at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California.
NASA’s Curiosity Mars rover captured this last look at
a field of bright white sulfur stones on Oct. 11, before leaving Gediz Vallis
channel. The field was where the rover made the first discovery of pure sulfur
on Mars. Scientists are still unsure exactly why theses rocks formed here.
Spiderwebs on Mars
Curiosity, which has traveled about
20 miles (33 kilometers) since landing in 2012, is now driving along the
western edge of Gediz Vallis channel, gathering a few more panoramas to
document the region before making tracks to the boxwork.
Viewed by MRO, the boxwork looks
like spiderwebs stretching across the surface. It’s believed to have formed
when minerals carried by Mount Sharp’s last pulses of water settled into
fractures in surface rock and then hardened. As portions of the rock eroded
away, what remained were the minerals that had cemented themselves in the
fractures, leaving the weblike boxwork.
On Earth, boxwork formations have been seen on cliffsides and in caves. But Mount Sharp’s boxwork structures stand apart from those both because they formed as water was disappearing from Mars and because they’re so extensive, spanning an area of 6 to 12 miles (10 to 20 kilometers).
“These ridges will include minerals that crystallized underground, where it would have been warmer, with salty liquid water flowing through,” said Kirsten Siebach of Rice University in Houston, a Curiosity scientist studying the region. “Early Earth microbes could have survived in a similar environment. That makes this an exciting place to explore.”
By: Jet Propulsion Laboratory
Source: NASA’s Curiosity Mars Rover Takes a Last Look at Mysterious Sulfur - NASA
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