New findings from rock samples collected and examined by NASA's Mars
Exploration Rover Opportunity have confirmed an ancient wet environment that was
milder and older than the acidic and oxidizing conditions told by rocks the
rover examined previously.
In the Jan. 24 edition of the journal Science, Opportunity Deputy Principal
Investigator Ray Arvidson, a professor at Washington University in St. Louis,
writes in detail about the discoveries made by the rover and how these
discoveries have shaped our knowledge of the planet. According to Arvidson and
others on the team, the latest evidence from Opportunity is landmark.
"These rocks are older than any we examined earlier in the mission, and they
reveal more favorable conditions for microbial life than any evidence previously
examined by investigations with Opportunity," said Arvidson.
While the Opportunity team celebrates the rover's 10th anniversary on Mars,
they also look forward to what discoveries lie ahead and how a better
understanding of Mars will help advance plans for human missions to the planet
in the 2030s.
Opportunity's original mission was to last only three months. On the day of
its 10th anniversary on the Red Planet, Opportunity is examining the rim of the
Endeavour Crater. It has driven 24 miles (38.7 kilometers) from where it landed
on Jan. 24, 2004. The site is about halfway around the planet from NASA's
latest Mars rover, Curiosity.
To find rocks for examination, the rover team at NASA's Jet Propulsion
Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., steered Opportunity in a loop, scanning the
ground for promising rocks in an area of Endeavour's rim called Matijevic Hill.
The search was guided by a mineral-mapping instrument on NASA's Mars
Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO), which did not arrive at Mars until 2006, long
after Opportunity's mission was expected to end.
Beginning in 2010, the mapping instrument, called the Compact Reconnaissance
Imaging Spectrometer for Mars, detected evidence on Matijevic Hill of a clay
mineral known as iron-rich smectite. The Opportunity team set a goal to examine
this mineral in its natural context -- where it is found, how it is situated
with respect to other minerals and the area's geological layers -- a valuable
method for gathering more information about this ancient environment.
Researchers believe the wet conditions that produced the iron-rich smectite
preceded the formation of the Endeavor Crater about 4 billion years ago.
"The more we explore Mars, the more interesting it becomes. These latest
findings present yet another kind of gift that just happens to coincide with
Opportunity's 10th anniversary on Mars," said Michael Meyer, lead scientist for
NASA's Mars Exploration Program. "We're finding more places where Mars reveals a
warmer and wetter planet in its history. This gives us greater incentive to
continue seeking evidence of past life on Mars."
Opportunity has not experienced much change in health in the past year, and
the vehicle remains a capable research partner for the team of scientists and
engineers who plot each day's activities to be carried out on Mars.
"We're looking at the legacy of Opportunity's first decade this week, but
there's more good stuff ahead," said Steve Squyres of Cornell University,
Ithaca, N.Y., the mission's principal investigator. "We are examining a rock
right in front of the rover that is unlike anything we've seen before. Mars
keeps surprising us, just like in the very first week of the mission."
JPL manages the Mars Exploration Rover Project for NASA's Science Mission
Directorate in Washington. Opportunity's twin, Spirit, which worked for six
years, and their successor, Curiosity, also contributed valuable information
about the diverse watery environments of ancient Mars, from hot springs to
flowing streams. NASA's Mars orbiters Odyssey and MRO study the whole planet and
assist the rovers.
"Over the past decade, Mars rovers have made the Red Planet our workplace,
our neighborhood," said John Callas, manager of NASA's Mars Exploration Rover
Project, which built and operates Opportunity. "The longevity and the distances
driven are remarkable. But even more important are the discoveries that are made
and the generation that has been inspired."
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