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Looking Back at Spirit's Trail to the Summit (Vertical)

Jet Propulsion Laboratory https://www.jpl.nasa.gov/ Oct. 21, 2005
This view from NASA's Mars Exploration Rover Spirit taken on Oct 7, 2005 looked back at the long and winding trail of twin wheel tracks the rover created to get to the top of 'Husband Hill' perched on a lofty, rock-strewn incline.

Before moving on to explore more of Mars, NASA's Mars Exploration Rover Spirit looked back at the long and winding trail of twin wheel tracks the rover created to get to the top of "Husband Hill." Spirit spent several days in October 2005 at this location, perched on a lofty, rock-strewn incline next to a precarious outcrop nicknamed "Hillary." Researchers helped the rover make several wheel adjustments to get solid footing before conducting scientific analysis of the rock outcrop. The rock turned out to be similar in appearance and composition to a rock target called "Jibsheet" PIA07979 that the rover had studied several months earlier and hundreds of meters away.

To the west are the slopes of the "Columbia Hills," so named for the astronauts of the Space Shuttle Columbia. Beyond the hills are the flat plains and rim of Gusev Crater.

Spirit took this 360-degree panorama of images with its navigation camera on the 627th Martian day, or sol, (Oct. 7, 2005) of its exploration of Gusev Crater on Mars. This view is presented in a vertical projection with geometric seam correction.

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NASA/JPL-Caltech

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