NASA’s Mars rover Curiosity acquired this image using
its Front Hazard Avoidance Camera (Front Hazcam) on April 23, 2026 — Sol 4874,
or Martian day 4,874 of the Mars Science Laboratory mission — at 01:12:31 UTC.
NASA/JPL-Caltech
Written by Sharon Wilson Purdy,
Planetary Geologist at the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum
Earth planning date: Friday, April 24,
2026
There was excitement in the air as the
Curiosity Science Team kicked off a drill campaign at the Atacama site to
characterize the first Mount Sharp layered-sulfate bedrock since leaving the
boxwork terrain.
Monday was a three-sol plan (4873-4875)
where we focused on “drill sol 1” activities that included a pre-load test on
our drill target as well as triage contact science. APXS assembled a set of
repeated observations on the Atacama drill target, and the coordinated MAHLI
images taken with different lighting will provide an opportunity to detect
possible changes between the datasets. Mastcam assembled stereo mosaics to
document the Atacama drill site, investigate variations in the bedrock at
“Kimsa Chata,” and characterize the layering within Paniri butte.
Planning resumed Friday with another
three-sol plan (4876-4878) that included the full drill and portion
characterization related to “drill sols 2 and 3” activities. Mastcam planned
stereo mosaics of rocks in the workspace including a laminated rock with an
exposed edge named “Queen of the Andes,” a rock with polygonal fractures that
was broken when the rover drove over it named “Curaco,” and more coverage of
the “El Almendrillo” target.
Rounding out the plans this week, the
Environmental theme group continues to monitor dust in the atmosphere, study
cloud movements, and document the presence of dust devils. The rover will also
autonomously select two targets to be analyzed by the ChemCam instrument.
Next week we look forward to continuing our drill campaign, where the next step will be delivering a portion of the Atacama target to the ChemMin instrument for analysis. The science team is looking forward to seeing how the mineralogy of the layered sulfate unit here compares to our last drill of the same unit at the Mineral King site, which is nearly 160 meters (525 feet) below our current location
Source: Curiosity Blog, Sols 4873-4878: Welcome to the Atacama Drill Target - NASA Science

