This image from NASA’s Mars Perseverance rover, taken
by the Mastcam-Z instrument’s right eye, shows a collection of ridge-forming
boulders. The rover acquired this image looking south along the ridge while
exploring the “Westport” region of the outer crater rim on July 18, 2025 — Sol
1568, or Martian day 1,568 of the Mars 2020 mission — at the local mean solar
time of 11:53:04.
NASA/JPL-Caltech/ASU
Written by Margaret Deahn, Ph.D. Student at Purdue University
NASA’s Mars 2020 rover is
continuing to explore a boundary visible from orbit dividing bright, fractured
outcrop from darker, smoother regolith (also known as a contact). The team has
called this region “Westport,” (a fitting title, as the rover is exploring the
western-most rim of Jezero), which hosts a contact between the smoother,
clay-bearing “Krokodillen” unit and an outcrop of olivine-bearing boulders that
converge to form a ridge on the outer Jezero crater rim. To learn more about
the nature of this contact, see this blog post by Dr. Melissa Rice. Piecing together geologic events like the formation
of this olivine-bearing material on Jezero’s crater rim may allow us to better
understand Mars’ most ancient history.
The rover has encountered several
olivine-bearing rocks while traversing the rim, but it is unclear if, and how
these rocks are all connected. Jezero crater is in a region of Mars known as
Northeast Syrtis, which hosts the largest contiguous exposure (more than
113,000 square kilometers, or more than 43,600 square miles) of olivine-rich
material identified from orbit on Mars (about the same square mileage as the
state of Ohio!). The olivine-rich materials are typically found draping over
older rocks, often infilling depressions, which may provide clues to their
origins. Possible origins for the olivine-rich materials in Northeast Syrtis
may include (but are not limited to): (1) intrusive igneous rocks (rocks that
cool from magma underground), (2) melt formed and deposited during an impact
event, or (3) pyroclastic ash fall or flow from a volcanic eruption.
The Perseverance rover’s investigation of the olivine-bearing materials on the rim of Jezero crater may allow us to better constrain the history of the broader volcanic units present in the Northeast Syrtis region. Olivine-rich material in Northeast Syrtis is consistently sandwiched between older, clay-rich rock and younger, more olivine-poor material (commonly referred to as the “mafic capping” unit), and may act as an important marker for recording early alteration by water, which could help us understand early habitable environments on Mars. We see potential evidence of all of these units on Jezero crater’s rim based on orbital mapping. If the olivine-bearing rocks the Perseverance rover is encountering on the rim are related to these materials, we may be able to better constrain the age of this widespread geologic unit on Mars.
Source: Linking Local Lithologies to a Larger Landscape - NASA Science

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