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This image, taken by Opportunity's microscopic imager, shows a portion of the rock outcrop at Meridiani Planum, Mars, dubbed "Guadalupe." |
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Opportunity Rover Finds Strong Evidence Meridiani Planum Was Wet
March 2, 2004
Scientists have concluded the part of Mars that NASA's Opportunity rover
is exploring was soaking wet in the past.
Evidence the rover found in a rock outcrop led scientists to the
conclusion. Clues from the rocks' composition, such as the presence
of sulfates, and the rocks' physical appearance, such as niches
where crystals grew, helped make the case for a watery history.
"Liquid water once flowed through these rocks. It changed their
texture, and it changed their chemistry," said Dr. Steve Squyres of
Cornell University, Ithaca, N.Y., principal investigator for the
science instruments on Opportunity and its twin, Spirit. "We've been
able to read the tell-tale clues the water left behind, giving us
confidence in that conclusion."
Dr. James Garvin, lead scientist for Mars and lunar exploration at
NASA Headquarters, Washington, said, "NASA launched the Mars
Exploration Rover mission specifically to check whether at least one
part of Mars ever had a persistently wet environment that could
possibly have been hospitable to life. Today we have strong evidence
for an exciting answer: Yes."
Opportunity has more work ahead. It will try to determine whether,
besides being exposed to water after they formed, the rocks may have
originally been laid down by minerals precipitating out of solution
at the bottom of a salty lake or sea.
The first views Opportunity sent of its landing site in Mars'
Meridiani Planum region five weeks ago delighted researchers at
NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif., because of the
good fortune to have the spacecraft arrive next to an exposed slice
of bedrock on the inner slope of a small crater.
The robotic field geologist has spent most of the past three weeks
surveying the whole outcrop, and then turning back for close-up
inspection of selected portions. The rover found a very high
concentration of sulfur in the outcrop with its alpha particle X-ray
spectrometer, which identifies chemical elements in a sample.
"The chemical form of this sulfur appears to be in magnesium, iron
or other sulfate salts," said Dr. Benton Clark of Lockheed Martin
Space Systems, Denver. "Elements that can form chloride or even
bromide salts have also been detected."
At the same location, the rover's Moessbauer spectrometer, which
identifies iron-bearing minerals, detected a hydrated iron sulfate
mineral called jarosite. Germany provided both the alpha particle X-
ray spectrometer and the Moessbauer spectrometer. Opportunity's
miniature thermal emission spectrometer has also provided evidence
for sulfates.
On Earth, rocks with as much salt as this Mars rock either have
formed in water or, after formation, have been highly altered by
long exposures to water. Jarosite may point to the rock's wet
history having been in an acidic lake or an acidic hot springs
environment.
The water evidence from the rocks' physical appearance comes in at
least three categories, said Dr. John Grotzinger, sedimentary
geologist from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge:
indentations called "vugs," spherules and crossbedding.
Pictures from the rover's panoramic camera and microscopic imager
reveal the target rock, dubbed "El Capitan," is thoroughly pocked
with indentations about a centimeter (0.4 inch) long and one-fourth
or less that wide, with apparently random orientations. This
distinctive texture is familiar to geologists as the sites where
crystals of salt minerals form within rocks that sit in briny water.
When the crystals later disappear, either by erosion or by
dissolving in less-salty water, the voids left behind are called
vugs, and in this case they conform to the geometry of possible
former evaporite minerals.
Round particles the size of BBs are embedded in the outcrop. From
shape alone, these spherules might be formed from volcanic
eruptions, from lofting of molten droplets by a meteor impact, or
from accumulation of minerals coming out of solution inside a
porous, water-soaked rock. Opportunity's observations that the
spherules are not concentrated at particular layers in the outcrop
weigh against a volcanic or impact origin, but do not completely
rule out those origins.
Layers in the rock that lie at an angle to the main layers, a
pattern called crossbedding, can result from the action of wind or
water. Preliminary views by Opportunity hint the crossbedding bears
hallmarks of water action, such as the small scale of the
crossbedding and possible concave patterns formed by sinuous
crestlines of underwater ridges.
The images obtained to date are not adequate for a definitive
answer. So scientists plan to maneuver Opportunity closer to the
features for a better look. "We have tantalizing clues, and we're
planning to evaluate this possibility in the near future,"
Grotzinger said.
JPL, a division of the California Institute of Technology in
Pasadena, manages the Mars Exploration Rover project for NASA's
Office of Space Science, Washington.
For information about NASA and the Mars mission on the Internet,
visit http://www.nasa.gov.
Images and additional information about the project are also
available at http://marsrovers.jpl.nasa.gov and
http://athena.cornell.edu.