Monday, September 5, 2011

NASA Robot arrives at ‘New’ Landing Site holding Clues to Ancient Water Flow on Mars

NASA Robot arrives at ‘New’ Landing Site holding Clues to Ancient Water Flow on Mars:




Opportunity investigates Tisdale 2 rock showing indications of ancient Martian water flow

NASA's Mars Exploration Rover Opportunity used its front hazard-avoidance camera to take this picture showing the rover's arm extended toward a light-toned rock, "Tisdale 2," during Sol 2695 of the rover's work on Mars (Aug. 23, 2011). The composition of Tisdale 2 is unlike any rock studied by Opportunity since landing 7.5 years ago. It is about 12 inches (30 centimeters) tall. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech

Updated with more team comments and images



Opportunity has begun a whole new mission at the vast expanse of Endeavour Crater promising a boatload of new science discoveries.


Scientists directing NASA’s Mars Opportunity rover gushed with excitement as they announced that the aging robot has discovered a rock with a composition unlike anything previously explored on the Red Planet’s surface – since she landed on the exotic Martian plains 7.5 years ago – and which offers indications that liquid water might have percolated or flowed at this spot billions of years ago.


Barely three weeks ago Opportunity arrived at the rim of the gigantic 14 mile ( 22 km) wide crater named Endeavour after an epic multi-year trek, and for the team it’s literally been like a 2nd landing on Mars – and the equivalent of the birth of a whole new mission of exploration at an entirely ‘new’ landing site. (...)
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PICTURES OF NATURE & UNIVERSE PHOTOGRAPHY

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