NASA's Mars Perseverance rover acquired this image of
the area in front of it, showing the Serpentine Lake abrasion patch on the
right-hand-side of the rock, with the Green Gardens sampling location on the
left. The rover used its onboard Front Right Hazard Avoidance Camera A, and
captured the image on Feb. 16, 2025 (sol 1420, or Martian day 1,420 of the Mars
2020 mission) at the local mean solar time of 16:45:19.
NASA/JPL-Caltech
Over the past week, Perseverance has been parked at a location called
“Tablelands,” an area containing the “Serpentine Lake” abrasion patch acquired
a few weeks ago. The Mars 2020 team has been diligently analyzing the data from
the abrasion patch, and these findings led to the decision to return to
Tablelands and attempt a sample at this location. Due to the disaggregated
material thwarting our last sample attempt at “Cat Arm Reservoir,” the team was eagerly
awaiting results from this sampling attempt at a target called “Green Gardens.”
Then, very early Monday morning,
the CacheCam images came down confirming that Perseverance had collected
another core on Mars! The team will be working next on sealing this sample
tube.
NASA's Mars Perseverance rover acquired this image
using its onboard Sample Caching System Camera (CacheCam), located inside the
rover underbelly. It looks down into the top of a sample tube to take close-up
pictures of the sampled material and the tube as it's prepared for sealing and
storage. The material seen inside the coring bit is the Green Gardens sample.
This image was acquired on Feb. 17, 2025 (sol 1420, or Martian day 1,420 of the
Mars 2020 mission) at the local mean solar time of 19:16:24.
NASA/JPL-Caltech
Tablelands, the rock from which the Green Gardens core comes, is exciting
to the Science Team because it contains serpentine minerals. These serpentine
minerals likely formed several billion years ago when water interacted with
rocks before Jezero crater formed. Water altered the minerals originally
present in the rock into serpentine, which is often green in color. This
characteristic green color is why the team chose the name “Green Gardens” for
this sample target. These minerals are especially exciting because their
structure and composition can tell us about the history of water on Mars. The
formation of serpentine on Earth can support microbial communities, and the
same might have been true on Mars. A sample like this from the Jezero crater
rim is an important piece of the puzzle to Jezero’s watery past!
Perseverance is planning to
conclude its time at Serpentine Lake with more science observations of the
Tablelands outcrop. These measurements could include a reexamination of the
Serpentine Lake abrasion patch and analysis of the tailings pile produced by
the Green Gardens drill. After snaking around this area for a couple weeks, our
next drives will take us further down the slope of the crater rim. We’ll head
toward our next stop at a site called “Broom Point,” where more exciting
discoveries await!
Written by Eleanor Moreland, Ph.D. Student Collaborator at Rice University
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