W Post
 
Mars rover Opportunity finds  mysterious ‘jelly doughnut rock’ on the Red 
Planet

 
 
By Meeri Kim, Updated: Thursday,  January 23, 2014

 
 
< 
Almost 10 years ago, _Opportunity_ 
(http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/mer/index.html#.UuFRYLROk-U)  found what 
NASA nicknamed “blueberries” on  Mars — 
small, iron-rich spheres that littered the planet’s surface and hinted at  
the presence of ancient water. Now the veteran rover is celebrating a decade 
of  operation with its discovery of a mysterious “jelly doughnut rock.” 
The pastry-sized rock, strangely appearing where there was nothing days  
earlier, is unlike anything scientists have ever seen before on the Red 
Planet. 



 
 
“It’s white around the outside, in the middle there’s kind of a low spot  
that’s dark red: It looks like a jelly doughnut,” said Cornell University  
astronomer _Steven Squyres_ 
(http://astro.cornell.edu/members/steven-w-squyres.html) , the principal 
investigator of Mars  Exploration Rover Mission. He 
announced the finding last week at a _celebratory  event at the California 
Institute of Technology_ (http://www.ustream.tv/recorded/42795898)  in 
Pasadena to honor the  rover’s decade anniversary.  
The rock turned up a few weeks ago on the rim of Endeavour Crater, a spot  
called _Murray Ridge_ 
(http://www.nasa.gov/content/murray-ridge-on-mars/#.UuEksbROk-U) , where 
Opportunity is spending its sixth  Martian winter. 
Before-and-after photos show the same patch of ground, riddled  with pebbles 
and 
craggy stone. But the after photo, taken 12 days later, depicts  the stark 
arrival of a white-and-maroon oddity.  
“It appeared — it just plain appeared at that spot,” Squyres said. NASA 
has  dubbed it “_Pinnacle Island_ 
(http://www.nasa.gov/jpl/mer/rock-pinnacle-island-pia17761/#.UuFQ7bROk-U) .” 
He has two theories about how the rock got there, although neither is quite 
 as exciting as some might hope. One possibility is that a nearby impact 
could  have flung a piece of debris Opportunity’s way. Or, in what Squyres 
believes is  the more likely explanation, one of the rover’s six wheels flicked 
it up out of  the ground.  
Scientists believe that Pinnacle Island landed upside down, giving them a  
serendipitous glimpse of the underside of a Martian rock that may not have 
been  exposed to the atmosphere for billions of years. The NASA team is 
closely  inspecting its composition, but so far, this rock is nothing like 
others 
they  have seen.  
“We’ve taken pictures of both the doughnut part and the jelly part,” he 
said  at the event. “We got our first data on the composition of the jelly  
yesterday.” 
The dark-red portion has lots of sulfur and magnesium, as well as twice as  
much manganese as anything previously measured on Mars. The results have 
deeply  confused NASA scientists, Squyres said, and have inspired heated 
debates about  what this could mean.  
The team has also released new Opportunity results, published in the 
journal  Science on Thursday, of an ancient clay-forming, subsurface aqueous 
environment  at the site of Endeavour Crater. Some of the exposed rocks are the 
oldest  materials investigated to date by Opportunity, from a time when Mars 
would have  been habitable.  
The water present before the impact may have been nearly neutral to 
slightly  acidic, harboring conditions that would have been favorable to life. 
The 
study  complements the younger Curiosity rover’s recent findings of an early 
lake that  once contained “drinkable” water.  
Both rovers contribute to an emerging picture of Martian history: from a  
warmer, wetter environment with neutral waters several billion years ago, to  
diminished water activity that became more acidic. Then in the last 3 
billion  years, Mars turned into a very dry and inhabitable place.  
Originally set for a mission of only 90 days, Opportunity on Saturday will  
celebrate the 10-year anniversary of its arrival on the planet. In that 
decade,  the rover has trekked almost 25 miles along the Martian soil. However, 
the  trusty robot is starting to show its age.  
“The front steering actuator is jammed, and the robotic arm has some  
arthritis to it,” said Mars Exploration Rovers project manager John Callas at a 
 
news conference Thursday. He also described Opportunity as “having a senior  
moment” due to problems with its flash memory. But all in all, the team has 
been  pleasantly surprised at its long lifetime and numerous contributions 
to our  understanding of Mars.  
In its first year, near the landing site, Opportunity discovered what NASA  
scientists nicknamed “_blueberries_ 
(http://marsrovers.jpl.nasa.gov/newsroom/pressreleases/20040204a.html) ” for 
their size and spherical shape. They 
were  scattered all over the surface and even embedded in rocks, like a 
blueberry  muffin. The team thought the orbs were a possible sign of liquid 
water, because  analysis revealed they were made of hematite, an iron oxide 
that 
typically forms  in an aqueous environment.  
“One of the things I like to say is that Mars keeps throwing new things at  
us,” Squyres said. “That’s the nature of exploration.” 
------------------ 
Also in this issue: 
 
_Ancient  Mars lake was habitable, ‘drinkable’_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/national/health-science/nasa-curiosity-rover-discovers-evidence-of-fresh
-water-mars-lake/2013/12/09/a1658518-60d9-11e3-bf45-61f69f54fc5f_story.html)
 
 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/national/health-science/nasa-curiosity-rover-discovers-evidence-of-fresh-water-mars-lake/2013/12/09/a1658518-60d9-11e3-b
f45-61f69f54fc5f_story.html)   
 
Joel Achenbach DEC 9 
NASA rover Curiosity finds signs of a lake with chemistry congenial to 
life,  and perhaps bottling. 



 
_Billionaire  details plans to send Americans to Mars _ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/national/health-science/going-to-mars-billionaire-dennis-tito-pla
ns-manned-mission-with-possible-2017-launch/2013/11/20/b859bc76-51e8-11e3-9f
e0-fd2ca728e67c_story.html) 
 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/national/health-science/going-to-mars-billionaire-dennis-tito-plans-manned-mission-with-possible-2017-launch/2013/11/20/
b859bc76-51e8-11e3-9fe0-fd2ca728e67c_story.html)   
 
Joel Achenbach NOV 20 
Dennis Tito says U.S. should exploit rare alignment of planets; 501-day  
mission would not include landing. 



 
_1,058  applicants still in contention to start Mars colony_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/national/health-science/mars-one-1058-applicants-still-in-co
ntention-to-start-mars-colony/2014/01/06/60a4aab4-73e3-11e3-8b3f-b1666705ca3
b_story.html) 
 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/national/health-science/mars-one-1058-applicants-still-in-contention-to-start-mars-colony/2014/01/06/60a4aab4-73e3-11e3-
8b3f-b1666705ca3b_story.html)   
 
Deborah Netburn and Los Angeles Times JAN 6 
Non-profit project hopes its one-way mission to the Red Planet will be 
ready  for blastoff in 2025. 



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