MEDIA RELATIONS OFFICE
JET PROPULSION LABORATORY
CALIFORNIA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY
NATIONAL AERONAUTICS AND SPACE ADMINISTRATION
PASADENA, CALIFORNIA 91109. TELEPHONE (818) 354-5011
http://www.jpl.nasa.gov

Guy Webster (818) 354-5011
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.                             

Dwayne Brown (202) 358-1726
NASA Headquarters, Washington, D.C.

News Release: 2004-088                    March 18, 2004

Mineral in Mars 'Berries' Adds to Water Story

A major ingredient in small mineral spheres analyzed by 
NASA's Mars Exploration Rover Opportunity furthers 
understanding of past water at Opportunity's landing 
site and points to a way of determining whether the vast 
plains surrounding the site also have a wet history. 

The spherules, fancifully called blueberries although 
they are only the size of BBs and more gray than blue, 
lie embedded in outcrop rocks and scattered over some 
areas of soil inside the small crater where Opportunity 
has been working since it landed nearly two months ago.

Individual spherules are too small to analyze with the 
composition-reading tools on the rover. In the past week, 
those tools were used to examine a group of berries that 
had accumulated close together in a slight depression 
atop a rock called "Berry Bowl."  The rover's Moessbauer 
spectrometer, which identifies iron-bearing minerals, 
found a big difference between the batch of spherules and 
a "berry-free" area of the underlying rock.

"This is the fingerprint of hematite, so we conclude that 
the major iron-bearing mineral in the berries is hematite," 
said Daniel Rodionov, a rover science team collaborator 
from the University of Mainz, Germany. On Earth, hematite 
with the crystalline grain size indicated in the spherules 
usually forms in a wet environment.

Scientists had previously deduced that the martian spherules 
are concretions that grew inside water-soaked deposits.  
Evidence such as interlocking spherules and random 
distribution within rocks weighs against alternate 
possibilities for their origin. Discovering hematite in 
the rocks strengthens this conclusion. It also adds 
information that the water in the rocks when the spherules 
were forming carried iron, said Dr. Andrew Knoll, a science 
team member from Harvard University, Cambridge, Mass.

"The question is whether this will be part of a still 
larger story," Knoll said at a press briefing today at 
NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif. 
Spherules below the outcrop in the crater apparently 
weathered out of the outcrop, but Opportunity has also 
observed plentiful spherules and concentrations of hematite 
above the outcrop, perhaps weathered out of a higher 
layer of once-wet deposits. The surrounding plains bear 
exposed hematite identified from orbit in an area the 
size of Oklahoma -- the main reason this Meridiani Planum 
region of Mars was selected as Opportunity's landing site.

"Perhaps the whole floor of Meridiani Planum has a residual 
layer of blueberries," Knoll suggested. "If that's true, 
one might guess that a much larger volume of outcrop once 
existed and was stripped away by erosion through time."

Opportunity will spend a few more days in its small crater 
completing a survey of soil sites there, said Bethany 
Ehlmann, a science team collaborator from Washington 
University, St. Louis. One goal of the survey is to 
assess distribution of the spherules farther from the 
outcrop. After that, Opportunity will drive out of its 
crater and head for a much larger crater with a thicker 
outcrop about 750 meters (half a mile) away.

Halfway around Mars, NASA's other Mars Exploration Rover, 
Spirit, has been exploring the rim of the crater nicknamed 
"Bonneville," which it reached last week.  A new color 
panorama shows "a spectacular view of drift materials on 
the floor" and other features, said Dr. John Grant, science 
team member from the National Air and Space Museum in 
Washington. Controllers used Spirit's wheels to scuff away 
the crusted surface of a wind drift on the rim for 
comparison with drift material inside the crater.

A faint feature at the horizon of the new panorama is the 
wall of Gusev Crater, about 80 kilometers (50 miles) away, 
said JPL's Dr. Albert Haldemann, deputy project scientist. 
The wall rises about 2.5 kilometers (1.6 miles) above 
Spirit's current location roughly in the middle of Gusev 
Crater. It had not been seen in earlier Spirit images 
because of dust, but the air has been clearing and 
visibility improving, Haldemann said.

Controllers have decided not to send Spirit into Bonneville 
crater. "We didn't see anything compelling enough to take 
the risk to go down in there," said JPL's Dr. Mark Adler, 
mission manager. Instead, after a few more days exploring 
the rim, Spirit will head toward hills to the east 
informally named "Columbia Hills," which might have 
exposures of layers from below or above the region's 
current surface. 

The main task for both rovers is to explore the areas 
around their landing sites for evidence in rocks and 
soils about whether those areas ever had environments 
that were watery and possibly suitable for sustaining 
life.  

JPL, a division of the California Institute of Technology 
in Pasadena, manages the Mars Exploration Rover project 
for NASA's Office of Space Science, Washington, D.C.  
Images and additional information about the project are 
available from JPL at 

http://marsrovers.jpl.nasa.gov

and from Cornell University, Ithaca, N.Y., at

http://athena.cornell.edu/ .


                     -end-


______________________________________________
Meteorite-list mailing list
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.pairlist.net/mailman/listinfo/meteorite-list

Reply via email to