Perseverance captured this mosaic looking downstream of the dune-filled Neretva Vallis river channel on May 17. The channel fed Jezero Crater with fresh water billions of years ago. NASA/JPL-Caltech/ASU/MSSS
Originally thought of as little more than a route clear of rover-slowing
boulders, Neretva Vallis has provided a bounty of geologic options for the
science team.
After detouring through a dune
field to avoid wheel-rattling boulders, NASA’s Perseverance Mars rover reached
its latest area of scientific interest on June 9. The route change not only
shortened the estimated drive time to reach that area — nicknamed “Bright
Angel” — by several weeks, but also gave the science team an opportunity to
find exciting geologic features in an ancient river channel.
Perseverance is in the later stages
of its fourth science campaign, looking for evidence of carbonate and olivine
deposits in the “Margin Unit,” an area along the inside of Jezero
Crater’s rim.
Located at the base of the northern channel wall, Bright Angel features rocky
light-toned outcrops that may represent either ancient rock exposed by river
erosion or sediments that filled the channel. The team hopes to find rocks
different from those in the carbonate-and-olivine-rich Margin Unit and gather
more clues about Jezero’s history.
Stitched together from 18 images taken by NASA’s Perseverance rover, this mosaic shows a boulder field on “Mount Washburn” on May 27. Intrigued by the diversity of textures and chemical composition in the light-toned boulder at center, the rover’s science team nicknamed the rock “Atoko Point.” NASA/JPL-Caltech/ASU/MSSS
To get to Bright Angel, the rover drove on a ridge along the Neretva Vallis
river channel, which billions of years ago carried a large amount of the water
that flowed into Jezero Crater. “We started paralleling the channel in late
January and were making pretty good progress, but then the boulders became
bigger and more numerous,” said Evan Graser, Perseverance’s deputy strategic
route planner lead at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California.
“What had been drives averaging over a hundred meters per Martian day went down
to only tens of meters. It was frustrating.”
Channel
Surfing
In rough terrain, Evan and his team
use rover imagery to plan drives of about 100 feet (30 meters) at a time. To go
farther on any given Martian day, or sol, planners rely on Perseverance’s
auto-navigation, or AutoNav, system to take over. But as the rocks became more plentiful, AutoNav
would, more times than not, determine the going was not to its liking and stop,
dimming the prospects of a timely arrival at Bright Angel. The team held out
hope, however, knowing they might find success cutting across a quarter-mile
(400-meter) dune field in the river channel.
NASA’s Perseverance rover was traveling in the ancient Neretva Vallis river channel when it captured this view of an area of scientific interest named “Bright Angel” — the light-toned area in the distance at right — with one of its navigation cameras on June 6. NASA/JPL-Caltech
“We had been eyeing the river channel just to the north as we went, hoping
to find a section where the dunes were small and far enough apart for a rover
to pass between — because dunes have been known to eat Mars rovers,” said Graser. “Perseverance also needed an entrance ramp we could safely
travel down. When the imagery showed both, we made a beeline for it.”
The Perseverance science team was
also eager to travel through the ancient river channel because they wanted to
investigate ancient Martian river processes.
Rock Star
With AutoNav helping guide the way
on the channel floor, Perseverance covered the 656 feet (200 meters) to the
first science stop in one sol. The target: “Mount Washburn,” a hill covered
with intriguing boulders, some of a type never observed before on Mars.
Superimposed on an image from NASA’s Mars Odyssey orbiter, this map shows Perseverance’s path between Jan. 21 and June 11. White dots indicate where the rover stopped after completing a traverse beside Neretva Vallis river channel. The pale blue line indicates the rover’s route inside the channel. NASA/JPL-Caltech/University of Arizona
“The diversity of textures and compositions at Mount Washburn was an
exciting discovery for the team, as these rocks represent a grab bag of
geologic gifts brought down from the crater rim and potentially beyond,” said
Brad Garczynski of Western Washington University in Bellingham, the co-lead of
the current science campaign.“But among all these different rocks, there was
one that really caught our attention.” They nicknamed it “Atoko Point.”
Some 18 inches (45 centimeters)
wide and 14 inches (35 centimeters) tall, the speckled, light-toned boulder
stands out in a field of darker ones. Analysis by Perseverance’s SuperCam and
Mastcam-Z instruments indicates that the rock is composed of the minerals
pyroxene and feldspar. In terms of the size, shape, and arrangement of its
mineral grains and crystals — and potentially its chemical composition — Atoko
Point it is in a league of its own.
Some Perseverance scientists
speculate the minerals that make up Atoko Point were produced in a subsurface
body of magma that is possibly exposed now on the crater rim. Others on the
team wonder if the boulder had been created far beyond the walls of Jezero and
transported there by the swift Martian waters eons ago. Either way, the team
believes that while Atoko is the first of its kind they’ve seen, it won’t be
the last.
After leaving Mount Washburn, the rover headed 433 feet (132 meters) north to investigate the geology of “Tuff Cliff” before making the four-sol, 1,985-foot (605-meter) journey to Bright Angel. Perseverance is currently analyzing a rocky outcrop to assess whether a rock core sample should be collected.
Source: NASA’s Perseverance Fords an Ancient River to Reach Science Target - NASA
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