Curiosity Spots "Coral Reef" Rock On Mars. It's A Sign Of Ancient Water

0
506

Curiosity Spots "Coral Reef" Rock On Mars. It's A Sign Of Ancient Water

Curiosity Spots "Coral Reef" Rock On Mars. It's A Sign Of Ancient Water

On sol 4,609, Curiosity spotted a rather familiar-looking rock.

James Felton headshot
A coral reef shaped rock on Mars.

The rock (top right) seen by the Mars Hand Lens Imager.

Every now and then, one of the robots on Mars sends back a picture of an unusual rock it has found on its journeys. After all, that's one of the reasons we sent them there.

These can range from the interesting (such as the donut-shaped rock which may not be from the planet) to the silly (hello, avocado rock. What's up, big pile of "bones" on Mars?). While Perseverance roams the Jezero Crater, constantly finding all sorts of interesting rocks, NASA's older rover Curiosity is still pulling its substantial weight.

In a find just announced by NASA, the rover snapped several images of a coral-shaped rock.

A coral-shaped rock on Mars.

An image of the rock captured by Curiosity's Remote Micro Imager.

Image credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/LANL/CNES/CNRS/IRAP/IAS/LPG

Needless to say, this is definitely not coral. If it were, the headline would have been something a little more dramatic and maybe mentioning casually that we have found life on Mars. The rock, though it looks surprisingly coral-like, is formed by natural forces. 

"Curiosity has found many small features like this one, which formed billions of years ago when liquid water still existed on Mars," NASA explains. "Water carried dissolved minerals into rock cracks and later dried, leaving the hardened minerals behind. Eons of sandblasting by the wind wore away the surrounding rock, producing the unique shapes seen today."

This process is seen frequently on Earth, and was possible on Mars back when it had water. Mars is currently a cold, desert planet, but that hasn't always been the case. From looking at the formations and features on the planet, including the ones highlighted by the Martian rovers, we can tell it once had liquid at the surface, carving valleys and lakebeds across it. There is water on Mars today on the surface and below in the form of ice, though Mars is too cold today for liquid water to exist at its surface.

We still don't know for sure where Mars's water went, though several mechanisms have been proposed and backed up by evidence. One idea is that with weaker gravity than Earth and a thinner atmosphere, water vapor was slowly blown away into space. Another is that the water became trapped inside Mars, leaking down into its crust, an idea backed up by an ocean of liquid water potentially being found below the surface by NASA's Insight Lander.

The answer, of course, could be a little of both. Further study, including by our coral-snapping robot Martian friends, will help pin down answers.


ARTICLE POSTED IN


space-icon

More Space and Physics Stories

clock-icon55 minutes ago

comments icon1

clock-icon4 hours ago

clock-icon4 hours ago

Buscar
Categorías
Read More
Music
Living Dead Girl's Molly Rennick Opens Up About Her Love of Metal
Living Dead Girl: Molly Rennick Discusses the Early Days of Jamming With Strangers From the...
By Test Blogger4 2025-08-28 13:00:05 0 427
Technology
Upgrade your PC for life with a $30 Microsoft Office license
Get Microsoft Office Pro Plus 2019 for Windows license, now just $29.97 (reg. $229) for life...
By Test Blogger7 2025-06-22 10:00:21 0 1K
Technology
Score the Sonos Ace headphones at their best price ever post-Prime Day
Best post-Prime Day headphones deal: Save $150 on the Sonos Ace...
By Test Blogger7 2025-07-14 18:00:12 0 830
Directorio
Unearthing the Past: Recent Findings at the Lost City of Cahokia Mounds
Unearthing the Past: Recent Findings at the Lost City of Cahokia Mounds...
By Test Blogger2 2025-06-23 16:00:10 0 1K
Food
This Hole-In-The-Wall Detroit Restaurant Might Be One Of Michigan's Tastiest Secrets
This Hole-In The-Wall Michigan Restaurant Is One Of The Best In The U.S....
By Test Blogger1 2025-07-02 17:00:09 0 1K