http://science.nasa.gov/headlines/y2004/22jan_meridianiplanum.htm

Destination: Meridiani Planum
NASA Science News
January 22, 2004

On January 24, 2004, NASA's Mars rover Opportunity is scheduled to land
on a Martian plain in search of evidence for water. 

January 22, 2004: On January 24, at about 9:05 p.m. Pacific Standard Time, 
NASA's second rover is scheduled to arrive on Mars. Opportunity will land 
near the equator, on a plain known as Meridiani Planum. It'll be halfway 
around the planet from Gusev Crater, where its twin, Spirit, is already 
feeding eager scientists as much data as it can transmit. 

Meridiani Planum interests scientists because it contains an
ancient layer of hematite, an iron oxide that, on Earth, almost
always forms in an environment containing liquid water. The
site appears dry now. So how did the hematite get there?
Was there once water in the area? If so, where did it go? 

"There are five or six hypotheses to explain the hematite on
Mars, but none of them are a slam-dunk," says NASA's
Mars Landing Site Science Coordinator John Grant. "We have
to go there to find out which is correct." 

It's possible, for example, that the hematite was produced directly
from iron-rich lavas, a process that would not require liquid water. But
if water was involved--and that's considered most probable--then,
most likely, the hematite either formed from the iron-rich waters of
an ancient lake, or it formed when Martian groundwater percolated
though layers of volcanic ash.

Opportunity's suite of spectrometers, cameras, microscopes, and sampling 
tools should allow scientists to figure out where the hematite came from. 
For instance, if a mineral called goethite is found among the hematite, 
that would mean that the hematite formed in watery conditions. On the 
other hand, if magnetite is found and goethite is not, a watery past is 
unlikely. 

Just being able to look at the way the hematite is distributed will 
provide some answers. If the hematite occurs as a thin layer within a 
pile of layers, then it's likely to have formed in a long-ago lake, says 
Grant. If, on the other hand, it occurs in more discrete veins, deposited 
between cracks in rocks, "then it's much more likely to have been 
associated with groundwater."

If you look in the Earth, he says, in places where the groundwater 
percolates through the subsurface, "you see evidence for life all over 
the place." This mission, Grant emphasizes, is not seeking evidence of 
Martian life. It's looking for environments that were favorable for life, 
and in which evidence of life may have been preserved. 

Knowing how the hematite formed will help determine if Meridiani Planum 
is that kind of environment. 

Meridiani Planum is unique on Mars because there's so much exposed hematite 
there, according to data gathered by NASA's Mars Global Surveyor spacecraft. 
"Localized deposits also exist in two other sites: the deep canyon Valles
Marinaris and a place called called Aram Chaos," notes Grant, "but neither 
are accessible based on the current landing system." Meridiani Planum has 
more hematite and it's a safer place to land.

Meridiani Planum is also attractive because the site appears to be eroding, 
with once-buried craters that are now half-revealed. Opportunity might be 
able to inspect layers of ground that would otherwise be hidden, affording 
a glimpse into the area's distant past.

"There's so much we don't know about Mars," says Grant. "But I really think 
we're going to come out of this mission with a better understanding of what 
Mars has been like over time, and where we might go for our next step."

Visit http://marsrovers.jpl.nasa.gov for the latest information about Spirit 
and Opportunity.


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