Home

NASA’s Curiosity Rover Uncovers Trove of Yellow Crystals on Mars

For nearly 10 years, NASA’s four-wheeled robot has been climbing the foothills of Mount Sharp, a tall mountain on Mars that stands above an ancient crater, uncovering mysteries with each of its layers. In its latest discovery, the Martian explorer stumbled upon a field of rocks made of pure sulfur, a chemical element that could hold precious clues to the Red Planet’s watery past.

The Curiosity rover recently drove over a rock, accidentally cracking it open. Inside were shiny yellow crystals, which scientists later determined to be elemental sulfur, NASA said. Although sulfur-based minerals (a mix of sulfur with other materials) have been found on Mars before, this is the first discovery of rocks made of pure sulfur. And there could be a whole bunch of them on Mars, but scientists aren’t sure how they formed.

“Finding a field of stones made of pure sulfur is like finding an oasis in the desert,” Ashwin Vasavada, Curiosity’s project scientist at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, said in a statement. “It shouldn’t be there, so now we have to explain it.”

Pure sulfur is tasteless and odorless, and it’s naturally found in volcanic regions as a result of the oxidation of hydrogen-sulfide. But this particular region that Curiosity has been exploring has shown no signs of past volcanic activity. Pure sulfur can also form through the oxidation of reduced sulfur compounds by way of microbial activity. In that case, the discovery of sulfur on Mars could be useful in the search for ancient microbial life on the Red Planet.

The Curiosity rover has been exploring Gediz Vallis, a winding channel that may have been carved out by an ancient river that left a 2-mile trail of boulders and sediment. By exploring this region, the rover is gathering clues for places in the planet’s ancient terrain that could have provided the nutrients needed for microbial life to possibly form on Mars.

Curiosity could not snatch a sample of the sulfur rocks because they were too small and brittle, but it did find a large rock nearby that the team nicknamed “Mammoth Lakes.” The rover used a drill attached at the end of its 7-foot (2-meter) robotic arm to make a hole in the rock and grabbed samples that can be analyzed by on-board instruments inside the rover’s belly.

“Discovering strange and unexpected things is what makes planetary exploration so exciting,” Vasavada said.

More: Things You Didn’t Know About NASA’s Mars Rovers

curiosity roverMarsNASA

You May Also Like

NASA Cancels VIPER’s Trip to the Moon After Spending $450 Million on Rover

Cost overruns and delays doomed the ice-hunting lunar rover.

NASA Beams Missy Elliott’s ‘The Rain (Supa Dupa Fly)’ to Venus

The rapper's 1997 debut single is now the first hip-hop song sent to deep space.

Mysterious Glowing Orbs Spotted from the ISS Look Like Alien Spaceships

The rare atmospheric phenomenon was powered by thunderstorms off the coast of South Africa.

Jupiter’s Lethal Radiation Threatens to Fry NASA’s Planned Space Probe

The intense radiation from Jupiter could damage parts of the Europa Clipper spacecraft, putting NASA's mission to explore Europa at risk.

Boeing’s Starliner Issue May Keep NASA Astronauts on ISS Until August

So far, the temperatures achieved during tests on the ground are not what the teams had hoped for.

Fly Me to the Moon Is, Somehow, Just Black Widow Again

Scarlett Johansson and Channing Tatum star in the space race rom-com that is just an absolute mess.

We may earn a commission when you buy through links on our sites.©2024 GIZMODO USA LLC. All rights reserved.

Mode

Follow us

Mode

Follow us

Source: Gizmodo

Previous

Next