NASA's Curiosity Rover Sees Martian 'Spiderwebs' Up Close
9 hours ago
- #ancient groundwater
- #Mars exploration
- #Curiosity rover
- NASA's Curiosity rover has been exploring Mars' boxwork formations, ridges suggesting ancient groundwater activity.
- The boxwork formations resemble spiderwebs from space, formed by minerals left by groundwater in bedrock fractures.
- Curiosity's exploration challenges include navigating narrow ridges and sandy hollows safely.
- The presence of boxwork high on Mount Sharp indicates a higher ancient groundwater table than previously thought.
- Curiosity's findings include fractures and nodules, signs of past groundwater, but their distribution puzzles scientists.
- Rock samples analyzed by Curiosity revealed clay minerals in ridges and carbonates in hollows, offering clues to Mars' watery past.
- A special wet chemistry analysis was performed on a recent sample to detect organic compounds related to life's building blocks.
- Curiosity will soon leave the boxwork region to explore sulfate-rich layers, studying Mars' climate change billions of years ago.