One of the navigation cameras on NASA’s Perseverance
captured the rover’s tracks coming from an area called “Witch Hazel Hill,” on
May 13, 2025, the 1,503rd Martian day, or sol, of the mission.
NASA/JPL-Caltech
Scientists expect the new area of interest on the lower slope of Jezero
Crater’s rim to offer up some of the oldest rocks on the Red Planet.
NASA’s Perseverance Mars rover is
exploring a new region of interest the team is calling “Krokodillen” that may
contain some of the oldest rocks on Mars. The area has been on the Perseverance
science team’s wish list because it marks an important boundary between the
oldest rocks of Jezero Crater’s rim and those of the plains beyond the crater.
“The last five months have been a
geologic whirlwind,” said Ken Farley, deputy project scientist for Perseverance
from Caltech in Pasadena. “As successful as our exploration of “Witch Hazel Hill” has been, our investigation of Krokodillen promises to be just as
compelling.”
Named by Perseverance mission scientists after a mountain ridge on the
island of Prins Karls Forland, Norway, Krokodillen (which means “the crocodile”
in Norwegian) is a 73-acre (about 30-hectare) plateau of rocky outcrops located
downslope to the west and south of Witch Hazel Hill.
A quick earlier investigation into
the region revealed the presence of clays in this ancient bedrock. Because
clays require liquid water to form, they provide important clues about the
environment and habitability of early Mars. The detection of clays elsewhere
within the Krokodillen region would reinforce the idea that abundant liquid
water was present sometime in the distant past, likely before Jezero Crater was
formed by the impact of an asteroid. Clay minerals are also known on Earth for
preserving organic compounds, the building blocks of life.
“If we find a potential biosignature here, it would most likely be from an entirely
different and much earlier epoch of Mars evolution than the one we found last
year in the crater with ‘Cheyava Falls,’” said Farley, referring to a rock sampled in July 2024 with chemical
signatures and structures that could have been formed by life long ago. “The
Krokodillen rocks formed before Jezero Crater was created, during Mars’
earliest geologic period, the Noachian, and are among the oldest rocks on Mars
Data collected from NASA’s Mars
orbiters suggest that the outer edges of Krokodillen may also have areas rich
in olivine and carbonate. While olivine forms from magma, carbonate minerals on
Earth typically form during a reaction in liquid water between rock and
dissolved carbon dioxide. Carbonate minerals on Earth are known to be excellent
preservers of fossilized ancient microbial life and recorders of ancient
climate.
The rover, which celebrated its
1,500th day of surface operations on May 9, is currently analyzing a rocky
outcrop in Krokodillen called “Copper Cove” that may contain Noachian rocks.
Ranking Mars
Rocks
The rover’s arrival at Krokodillen
comes with a new sampling strategy for the nuclear-powered rover that allows for leaving some cored samples unsealed in case the
mission finds a more scientifically compelling geologic feature down the road.
To date, Perseverance has collected and sealed two regolith (crushed rock and dust) samples, three witness tubes, and one atmospheric sample. It has also collected 26 rock cores and
sealed 25 of them. The rover’s one unsealed sample is its most recent, a rock
core taken on April 28 that the team named “Bell Island,” which contains small
round stones called spherules. If at some point the science team decides a new sample should take its
place, the rover could be commanded to remove the tube from its bin in storage
and dump the previous sample.
“We have been exploring Mars for
over four years, and every single filled sample tube we have on board has its
own unique and compelling story to tell,” said Perseverance acting project
scientist Katie Stack Morgan of NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern
California. “There are seven empty sample tubes remaining and a lot of open
road in front of us, so we’re going to keep a few tubes — including the one
containing the Bell Island core — unsealed for now. This strategy allows us
maximum flexibility as we continue our collection of diverse and compelling
rock samples.”
Before the mission adopted its new
strategy, the engineering sample team assessed whether leaving a tube unsealed
could diminish the quality of a sample. The answer was no.
“The environment inside the rover
met very strict standards for cleanliness when the rover was built. The tube is
also oriented in such a way within its individual storage bin that the
likelihood of extraneous material entering the tube during future activities,
including sampling and drives, is very low,” said Stack Morgan.
In addition, the team assessed whether remnants of a sample that was dumped could “contaminate” a later sample. “Although there is a chance that any material remaining in the tube from the previous sample could come in contact with the outside of a new sample,” said Stack Morgan, “it is a very minor concern — and a worthwhile exchange for the opportunity to collect the best and most compelling samples when we find them.”
Source: NASA’s Perseverance Mars Rover to Take Bite Out of ‘Krokodillen’ - NASA
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