• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Perseverance Samples Hold Key To Understanding Water-Rich Martian Past

August 25, 2022 by Deborah Bloomfield

NASA’s Perseverance has been working on the floor of Jezero Crater for over a year, collecting samples and analyzing the terrain. Some samples have been stored in special capsules to be sent back to Earth in the next decade – but researchers have already been able to obtain some exciting results about the rocks, with implications for the Martian past and the Red Planet’s ability to maybe host life.

Researchers have discussed these first results in the journals Science (here and here) and Science Advances (here and here). The work in the first paper focuses on the composition of the Séítah formation, one of the first intriguing targets for Perseverance. It is made of igneous rocks, mostly olivine, suggesting that they are formed by the slow cooling of a thick sheet of magma.

This idea is confirmed in the second paper, which focused on the radar observation of up to 15 meters (49 feet) below the surface. The scan of the initial three-kilometer (1.86-mile) journey reveals a layered structure below the crater floor. The observations are consistent with igneous layers altered by water over time.

Jezero crater was a lake with a river flowing into it. Perseverance is now exploring the delta of that river. By analyzing the sample here on Earth, it will be possible to date when the lake was formed as well as understand what it was like.

“From a sampling perspective, this is huge,” co-lead author of the Science paper David Shuster, professor of earth and planetary science at the University of California, Berkeley, said in a statement. “The fact that we have evidence of aqueous alteration of igneous rocks — those are the ingredients that people are very excited about, with regard to understanding environmental conditions that could potentially have supported life at some point after these rocks were formed.”

Advertisement

The samples in question were taken from the Séítah formation and the nearby Máaz formation, respectively the Navajo terms for “amidst the sand” and “Mars”. The rocks appeared to have formed underground and cooled slowly, and they might be from two different eruptions, so these and the many sample Perseverance is collecting will provide a detailed history of the region.

Map of where Perseverence and Ingenuity have been. Image Credit: NASA

Map of where Perseverence and Ingenuity have been. Image Credit: NASA

“One great value of the igneous rocks we collected is that they will tell us about when the lake was present in Jezero. We know it was there more recently than the igneous crater floor rocks formed,” co-lead author geochemist Kenneth Farley of Caltech, added. “This will address some major questions: When was Mars’ climate conducive to lakes and rivers on the planet’s surface? And when did it change to the very cold and dry conditions we see today?”

Understanding what went on in this ancient lake is a priority objective for Perseverance. It impacts our understanding of Mars and of the early solar system in general – and there is obviously the question of life. Were the right ingredients present on Mars? Would such a lake have the right properties to turn them into a life form? Questions that are yet to receive an answer.

Advertisement

“These kinds of environments on Earth are places where life thrives. The goal of exploring the Jezero delta and crater is to look in these once-habitable environments for rocks that might contain evidence of ancient life,” co-author Professor Amy Williams, from the University of Florida, said in another statement.

Perseverance will continue to do its analysis and sample collection, together with its faithful companion Ingenuity, the Mars helicopter that has recently completed its 30th flight.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. PassFort, a RegTech SaaS for KYC and AML, nets $16.2M
  2. UK set for COVID booster programme as PM Johnson sets out winter plan
  3. Boeing showcases eco-friendly tech as industry faces pressure
  4. White House weighs broader oversight of cryptocurrency market

Source Link: Perseverance Samples Hold Key To Understanding Water-Rich Martian Past

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • Humans Started Butchering Elephants 1.78 Million Years Ago In Tanzania
  • Unexpected Discovery Hints We Might Be Inside A Black Hole
  • Why Are People Talking About This “Square Structure” Captured On Mars?
  • The World Has Five Oceans, Not Four – Discover The Latest One
  • Just 80 Percent Of People Can Perceive This Optical Illusion And No One Knows Why
  • Something Other Than Geological Processes Or Humans Created These Caves
  • Can Black Holes Lead To Other Places In The Universe?
  • The Devastating Communication Problem Facing Light-Speed Travel
  • The Great British Pet Massacre: One Of The Saddest Tragedies Of 1939
  • Would A Vacuum-Filled Balloon Float?
  • Queen Ant Produces Babies Of 2 Different Species, For The First Time Ever We Have A Complete Map Of Brain Activity, And Much More This Week
  • Yes, Your Attention Span Might Have Shortened, But That Might Not Be A Terrible Thing
  • This May Be The First Known Portrait Of A Viking – And It’s A Sexually Rampant “Beard Fondler”
  • The Largest Snake In Captivity Is A Humongous 7.7-Meter Reticulated Python Called Medusa
  • Poo Power: How Animal Dung Could Unlock New Antibiotic Treatments
  • Perfectly Preserved Dinosaur Tail Found Inside 99-Million-Year-Old Amber Was Mistaken For A Plant
  • Why Aren’t Full Photos Of The Milky Way Real? A NASA Analyst Explains The Obvious
  • Freaky Ratfish Have Teeth Growing Out Of Their Foreheads, And They Use Them For Love
  • The Largest Turtle Ever Known To Have Lived Was An Absolute Unit
  • “It Literally Leapt Out Of The Rock At Us”: How Violent Storms Led To The Extraordinary Preservation Of Baby Pterosaurs
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version