MARSDAILY
Mars rover's first rock samples reveal lengthy water exposure
by Paul Brinkmann
Washington DC (UPI) Sep 10, 2021

The first two rock samples examined by NASA's Mars rover Perseverance give scientists a firm belief that water inundated Jezero Crater for a sustained period of time, the agency announced Friday.

"We determined salt granules in the rock indicate it was exposed to water," Julia Goreva, a NASA scientist for the rover program, said in a news conference from the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif.

The rocks, drilled Monday and Wednesday, came from an igneous or volcanic rock. The agency previously knew that water once filled the crater, but not for how long.

The salt deposits mean NASA can now rule out a sudden "flash in the pan" water event, the agency said in a news release.

"It looks like our first rocks reveal a potentially habitable sustained environment," said Ken Farley, project scientist for the mission, said in the release. "It's a big deal that the water was there a long time."

The rover sampled a rock NASA dubbed Rochette on a ridge named Artuby. The two samples are named Montdenier and Montagnac after a French mountain and region, respectively.

Scientists chose the Rochette drilling site after a previous attempt to drill a sample failed because the brittle rock target crumbled.

The samples now are stored and sealed inside the rover as part of a multinational effort to bring Mars rocks back to Earth by 2031, said Kate Stack Morgan, Perseverance deputy project scientist.

The samples may be dropped on the Martian surface for a future rover to retrieve and launch into space, where another spacecraft would catch them and return them to Earth. Ultimately, the goal is to use advanced equipment on Earth to analyze the rocks for signs of ancient life on Mars.

"We plan to continue exploring Jezero Crater ... for about two Earth years," Stack Morgan said in the news conference. "We will make decisions then on which samples we'd like to put down in that first cache."

The samples, about the thickness of a pencil, were 2.4 inches long and 2.6 inches long, which are nearly ideal, said Jessica Samuels, the Perseverance surface mission manager, at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory.

"Reflecting on this moment, it has been the culmination of so many years of so many people's hard work and time and effort," Samuels said.

"While it definitely was a very long time waiting, I think all of us can say that it feels fantastic to ... be up here and share this with you."


Related Links
Mars News and Information at MarsDaily.com
Lunar Dreams and more

MARSDAILY
Martian snow is dusty, could potentially melt, new study shows
Tempe AZ (SPX) Aug 24, 2021
Over the last two decades, scientists have found ice in many locations on Mars. Most Martian ice has been observed from orbital satellites like NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter. But determining the grain size and dust content of the ice from that far above the surface is challenging. And those aspects of the ice are crucial in helping scientists determine how old the ice is and how it was deposited. So planetary scientists Aditya Khuller and Philip Christensen of Arizona State University, with S ... read more

Comment using your Disqus, Facebook, Google or Twitter login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle

MARSDAILY
Dynetics selected to build NASA's sustainable lunar lander

Path set for commercial communications around the Moon

UK space company to establish link with the far side of the Moon

Curtin research shines a light on Moon's oldest geologic imprints

MARSDAILY
Chinese astronauts return to Earth after 90-day mission

China prepares to launch Tianzhou-3 cargo spacecraft

Chinese astronauts return to earth after 90-day mission

Chinese astronauts complete three-month space mission

MARSDAILY
Dino-killing asteroid set the stage for evolution of modern snakes

ESO captures best images yet of peculiar "dog-bone" asteroid

Modern snakes evolved from a few survivors of dino-killing asteroid

Diamonds in the sky

MARSDAILY
Mushballs stash away missing ammonia at Uranus and Neptune

A few steps closer to Europa: spacecraft hardware makes headway

Juno joins Japan's Hisaki satellite and Keck Observatory to solve "energy crisis" on Jupiter

Hubble finds first evidence of water vapor on Ganymede

MARSDAILY
Titan-in-a-glass experiments hint at mineral makeup of Saturn moon

Saturn makes waves in its own rings

Dragonfly mission to Titan announces big science goals

Icequakes likely rumble along geyser-spitting fractures in Saturn's icy moon Enceladus

MARSDAILY
Synspective signs launch agreement with Exolaunch to launch 3rd SAR Satellite "StriX-1" on Soyuz-2

Better weather forecasting through satellite isotope data assimilation

TROPICS pathfinder satellite produces global first light images and captures Hurricane Ida

What's going on with the ozone?

MARSDAILY
German ESA astronaut Matthias Maurer is ready for his first ISS mission - 'Cosmic Kiss'

Russian Gov't allocates $60Mln to build Soyuz for tourist flights

Dates set for Space Station change of command as Franco-German relations awarded Media prize

Simultaneous presence in space surges to historic maximum of 14 people

MARSDAILY
Observations in stellar factory indicates start of planet production

How planets may be seeded with the chemicals necessary for life

Planets form in organic soups with different ingredients

Earthlike planets in other solar systems? Look for moons