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NASA's rover Curiosity discovers Australia on Mars, sort of
by Brooks Hays
Washington (UPI) Apr 7, 2013


Image captured by Curiosity's Navcam camera on Sol 593 (April 7) of the mission. The flat-topped rock resembles Australia. Kinda. Image courtesy NASA/JPL-Caltech.

In documenting a new region of Mars, NASA's rover Curiosity came across a rock that looks very much like Australia.

Curiosity's navigating camera beamed the image back to NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory near Los Angeles earlier today, and the space agency quickly uploaded it to Curiosity's raw image library, available for online visitors to peruse.

NASA's image caption makes no mention of the Land Down Under, but as Discovery News reports, Twitter user @CoUdErMaNn quickly spotted the resemblance.

Very strange rock formation took #Nasa @MarsCuriosity today in Mars> pic.twitter.com/lmml8r17uL— CoUdErMaNn (@CoUdErMaNn) April 7, 2014

Making the discovery all the more fascinating -- and coincidental -- is the fact that, last week, Curiosity began surveying a region of Mars known as "Kimberley," named for a region of Western Australia.

"This is the spot on the map we've been headed for, on a little rise that gives us a great view for context imaging of the outcrops at the Kimberley," Melissa Rice, a scientists at the California Institute of Technology, said in a NASA press release.

With Curiosity's arrival in the Kimberley region, the rover has now traveled some 3.8 miles since its Martian landing in August of 2012.

[Discovery News]

[NASA]

.


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Curiosity Scoping Out Next Study Area
Pasadena CA (JPL) Apr 07, 2014
On Wednesday, NASA's Curiosity Mars rover drove the last 98 feet feet (30 meters) needed to arrive at a site planned since early 2013 as a destination for studying rock clues about ancient environments that may have been favorable for life. The rover reached a vantage point for its cameras to survey four different types of rock intersecting in an area called "the Kimberley," after a region ... read more


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