Archive for john grotzinger

Mars rover shows planet could have supported life

LOS ANGELES (AP)—Drilling into a rock near its landing spot, the Curiosity rover has answered a key question about Mars: The red planet long ago harbored some of the ingredients needed for primitive life to thrive.

Topping the list is evidence of water and basic elements that teeny organisms could feed on, scientists said Tuesday.

“We have found a habitable environment that is so benign and supportive of life that probably if this water was around and you had been on the planet, you would have been able to drink it,” said chief scientist John Grotzinger of the California Institute of Technology.

The discovery comes seven months after Curiosity touched down in an ancient crater. Last month, it flexed its robotic arm to drill into a fine-grained, veiny rock and then tested the powder in its onboard labs.

Curiosity is the first spacecraft sent to Mars that could collect a sample from deep inside a rock, and scientist said they hit pay dirt with that first rock.

Mars today is a hostile, frigid desert, constantly bombarded by radiation. Previous missions have found that the planet was more tropical billions of years ago. And now scientists have their first evidence of a habitable environment outside of Earth.

This was an environment where microbes “could have lived in and maybe even prospered in,” Grotzinger said.

The car-size rover made a dramatic “seven-minutes-of-terror” landing last August near the planet’s equator. As high-tech as Curiosity is, it lacks the tools to detect actual microbes, living or extinct. It can only use its chemistry lab to examine Martian rocks to determine the kind of environment they might have lived in.

The analysis revealed the rock that Curiosity bore into contained a chemical soup of sulfur, hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, phosphorus and simple carbon—essential chemical ingredients for life. Also present were clay and sulfate minerals, signs that the rock formed in a watery environment.

NASA rovers Opportunity and Spirit—before it fell silent—also uncovered evidence of a wet Martian past elsewhere on the planet, but scientists think the water would have been too acidic for microbes.

The ancient water at Curiosity’s pit stop—possibly a former lake bed—appears to be neutral and not too salty. It previously found a hint of the site’s watery past—an old streambed that the six-wheel rover crossed to get to the flat bedrock.

Curiosity has yet to turn up evidence of complex carbon compounds, fundamental to all living things. Scientists said a priority is to search for a place where organics might be preserved.

The drilled rock isn’t far from Curiosity’s landing spot in Gale Crater; the rover is ultimately headed to a mountain in the crater’s middle. Images from space spied signs of clay layers at the base of the mountain—a good spot to hunt for the elusive organics.

It has been slow going as engineers learn to handle the rover, which is far more tech-savvy than anything that has landed before on Earth’s planetary neighbor.

Over the years, Mars spacecraft in orbit and on the surface have beamed back a wealth of information about the planet’s geology. Scientists have also been able to study rocks from Mars that have occasionally landed on Earth.

The latest news comes during a lull in the two-year, $2.5 billion mission. Curiosity has been prevented from doing science experiments as engineers troubleshoot a computer problem.

Scientists still plan to drive toward the mountain, but not until Curiosity drills into another rock at its current location. Since flight controllers on Earth will be out of touch with Mars spacecraft for most of next month due to a planetary alignment, the second drilling won’t get underway until May.

Mars Science Laboratory

Source: The Associated Press

Article source: http://www.rdmag.com/news/2013/03/mars-rover-shows-planet-could-have-supported-life

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NASA finds Habitable Conditions Existed on Mars

NASA’s Curiosity Rover finds evidence from rock samples


A color image from NASA’s Curiosity rover’s Mast Camera shows part of the wall of Gale Crater, the location on Mars where the rover landed August 5, 2012. (Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/MSSS)

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The Rover has been exploring in an area called Yellowknife Bay where the scientists believe was the end of an ancient network of rivers or an old lake bed existent in the planet’s history. Curiosity, with ten science instruments, sent the data back to NASA after analysis. The chemicals found on the rock include sulfur, nitrogen, hydrogen, oxygen, phosphorus, and carbon, the basic building blocks of life. The sample was 20 percent clay and contained water-rounded stones.

“We have found a habitable environment that is so benign and supportive of life that probably — if this water was around and you had been on the planet, you would have been able to drink it,” said Curiosity chief scientist John Grotzinger, of Caltech in Pasadena.

“We have characterized a very ancient, but strangely new ‘gray Mars’ where conditions once were favorable for life,” said Grotzinger. “Curiosity is on a mission of discovery and exploration, and as a team we feel there are many more exciting discoveries ahead of us in the months and years to come.”

A self-portrait of the Mars rover Curiosity combines dozens of exposures taken by the rover’s Mars Hand Lens Imager (MAHLI) during the 177th Martian day, or sol, of Curiosity’s work on February 3, 2013 on the planet Mars. (Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/MSSS/Getty)

“It’s a remarkable achievement. We are starting to see results from MSL (Mars Science Laboratory) that already justify the mission,” said John Bridges, a planetary scientist and member of the Mars Curiosity team at Leicester University. “We’ll take it one sol at a time.” A sol is a day on Mars, equal to 1.027 Earth days.

Curiosity, costing $1.4bn, landed seven months ago to begin its two-year or one Martian year (687 days) mission. It’s main destination is a set of interesting deposits at the base of Mount Sharp, which rises 3 miles (5 kilometers) from Gale’s Center.

Europe and Russia have signed a deal last Thursday for a joint Mars mission, to explore and dig the surface of Mars deeper than the Curiosity Rover. According to a Reuters report, their plan for the ExoMars Rover includes bringing the samples back to Earth for detailed analysis.

 

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Article source: http://www.theepochtimes.com/n2/science/nasa-finds-habitable-conditions-existed-on-mars-364032.html

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Curiosity discovers ancient Mars could have supported life

NASA just announced that its Curiosity rover has discovered evidence that Mars had the conditions necessary to support life in ancient times, specifically microorganisms. The evidence comes comes from a drilling sample retrieved by the rover from a rock on the Red Planet. The powder was found to contain traces of “sulfur, nitrogen, hydrogen, oxygen, phosphorus and carbon,” all key chemical ingredients of microbial life. NASA scientists just finished a live streaming press conference to explain the results.

The scientists said that the Martian environment where the rock sample was found, called Yellowknife Bay, was likely the end of a river system or lake bed that dried up millions of years ago, but that would have been hospitable to microscopic organisms when it was wet. “We have found a habitable environment that is so benign and supportive of life that if this water was around and you had been on the planet, you would have been able to drink it,” said John Grotzinger, Curiosity’s chief project scientist.

“If this water was around, and you had been on the planet, you would have been able to drink it.”

Mars-rock-supportive-life Image taken by the Curiosity rover of a rock thought to have been shaped under water and that would have been able to support life, based on new evidence from sample analysis.

Unfortunately, the rover isn’t able to find evidence of any fossilized microbes themselves or their metabolism, as even its most accurate camera isn’t designed to resolve details that are that small. Still, NASA scientists said that the newly uncovered evidence is the strongest yet that life existed on another planet besides Earth.

“This is what we call ‘paydirt.’”

“This is what we call ‘paydirt,’” said David Blake, the inventor of the rover’s chemistry and mineralogy instrument, one of the two major sources of data behind the discovery. The chemistry and mineralogy instrument, which uses X-rays to measure the abundance of specific minerals, found that 20 percent of the rock the rover drilled into is made up of clay minerals formed by fresh water. Curiosity’s sample analysis instrument also found that the rock powder contained oxidized and non-oxidized chemicals, a combination that supports microbial life back on Earth.

“There was water for microorganisms to use if they were there.”

The environment that Curiosity sampled was “neutral,” according to Michael Meyer, lead scientist for NASA’s Mars Exploration Program. “It wasn’t too salty..there was water for microorganisms to use if they were there.” Grotzinger added that the rover would be drilling into the rock to retrieve another sample in the coming days, and that if it didn’t look promising, the rover would continue driving toward its ultimate destination, a nearby 3.4-mile-high mountain called Mount Sharp.

Article source: http://www.theverge.com/2013/3/12/4094534/nasa-curiosity-rover-discovers-ancient-mars-could-have

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NASA Says Ancient Mars Could Have Supported Life

Copyright © 2013 NPR. For personal, noncommercial use only. See Terms of Use. For other uses, prior permission required.

RENEE MONTAGNE, HOST:

Let’s spend a few minutes contemplating life on Mars. NASA says its newest rover on Mars has found signs that the Red Planet once had conditions that would have been friendly enough to support life. The evidence comes from a scoop of grayish powder that the rover collected by drilling into a flat rock.

NPR’s Nell Greenfieldboyce has more.

NELL GREENFIELDBOYCE, BYLINE: NASA’s Curiosity rover is the size of a car. The robot has been driving around the bottom of a Martian crater since August, searching for proof that the planet might have once been habitable – which is not the same as actually looking for alien life.

John Grotzinger is project scientist for Curiosity at the California Institute of Technology.

JOHN GROTZINGER: You know, we’re not a life detection mission. If there was microbial metabolism going on, we really wouldn’t have the ability to measure that.

GREENFIELDBOYCE: But this rover can still do unprecedented things, like drill two and a half inches into some bedrock and prepare the powdery sample for analysis in its own on-board chemistry lab. And it looks like Curiosity hit pay-dirt. NASA says the rock contained some of the key chemical ingredients for life – like sulfur, nitrogen, hydrogen, oxygen, phosphorus and carbon.

It also found abundant clay minerals that suggest the rock formed at the bottom of standing water, like a lake or pond. And the watery environment wouldn’t have been too salty or too acidic.

GROTZINGER: We have found a habitable environment that is so benign and supportive of life that probably, if this water was around and you had been on the planet, you would have been able to drink it.

GREENFIELDBOYCE: This wet world is long gone but just knowing it existed is a big deal. David Blake of NASA’s Ames Research Center is the lead scientist for one of the rover’s chemistry instruments. He says while people have speculated about places beyond Earth that might be habitable…

DAVID BLAKE: I think that is probably the only definitively habitable environment that we’ve described and recorded. There are places we would suggest could be habitable but we haven’t measured there.

GREENFIELDBOYCE: Previous missions to Mars suggested that conditions on the planet might have been too harsh. Hap McSween is a planetary geoscientist at the University of Tennessee in Knoxville, who’s worked on other Mars rover missions. He says the rover called Opportunity also found rocks that clearly had been altered by water.

HAP MCSWEEN: The problem was that the water was more like battery acid than drinking water.

GREENFIELDBOYCE: And even though some Earth microbes can survive in that kind of stew, there’s debate about whether life could get its start there. The ancient water in this new discovery seems like it would be way more hospitable.

MCSWEEN: This particular water was neutral to very slightly basic, something that would not be such a challenge for organisms to live in.

GREENFIELDBOYCE: So far, Curiosity hasn’t found solid evidence of the kind of organic molecules that serve as the basic building blocks for life. That’s something the team will now be focusing on.

Jim Bell is a planetary scientist at Arizona State University who’s working on the mission.

JIM BELL: We’ve got equipment that could find organic molecules and an environment where the conditions were right for habitability as we know it.

GREENFIELDBOYCE: Scientists will be out of touch with the rover for awhile in April because of the positions of Earth and Mars but they plan to drill another sample of rock in May.

Nell Greenfieldboyce, NPR News.

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Article source: http://www.npr.org/2013/03/13/174174581/nasa-says-ancient-mars-could-have-supported-life

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‘Giddy’ NASA official asks Curiosity scientists if they’d go to Mars

NASA’s Curiosity rover has drilled a hole-in-one, discovering signs of a past environment once suitable for living microbes — and the discovery has left some NASA officials breathless.

The Mars Science Laboratory mission’s early achievement of its stated goal before ever reaching its destination, Gale Crater’s 3-mile-high Mt. Sharp, may be inspiring some to even greater Martian ambitions.

LIVE DISCUSSION: Join us at 2 p.m. PT

“Just sitting in the audience here, I feel giddy. Because I have an image now of possibly a lake, a freshwater lake, on a Mars with probably a thicker atmosphere, maybe a snow-capped Mt. Sharp,” said John Grunsfeld, associate administrator for the space agency’s Science Mission Directorate.

President Obama’s goal to send a manned mission to the Red Planet by the 2030s remains far on the horizon — but the findings still fired up the former astronaut’s imagination.

“It makes me want to go,” Grunsfeld told Mars scientists assembled at a Tuesday news conference. “So let me just ask you, how many of you now would like to go to Mars and be able to go with a rock hammer and maybe a little more modern instrumentation?”

There was a long pause. Then Curiosity’s lead scientist John Grotzinger chimed in. 

“I’ll go, John,” the Caltech geologist said, “as long as you can get me back.”

For more on Curiosity’s (literally) ground-breaking findings, tune in on Science Now at 2 p.m. Pacific for a live video chat with Mars mission scientist Joel Hurowitz.

Follow me on Twitter @aminawrite.

Article source: http://www.latimes.com/news/science/sciencenow/la-sci-sn-mars-life-elements-microbes-drill-nasa-grunsfeld-20130313,0,1885360.story

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NASA tests find Mars may have sustained life

NASA scientists say tests on a Mars rock show the planet could have supported primitive life.

NASA scientists said at a briefing at NASA’s Washington headquarters on Tuesday that an analysis of a Mars rock sample from the Curiosity rover showed minerals needed to produce and support life, including hydrogen, carbon and oxygen.

“A fundamental question for this mission is whether Mars could have supported a habitable environment,” said Michael Meyer, lead scientist for NASA’s Mars Exploration Programme. “From what we know now, the answer is yes.”

The six-wheeled robot is the most sophisticated sent to another planet. It has 10 scientific instruments on board.

The rock sample was drilled from a sedimentary bedrock sample and found to contain clay minerals, sulfate minerals and other chemicals.

John Grotzinger, a Curiosity project scientist from the California Institute of Technology, said based on the analysis of those chemicals, researchers were able to determine that the water that helped form the rocks were of a relatively neutral pH.

“We have found a habitable environment that is so benign and supportive of life, that probably if this water was around and you had been there, you would have been able to drink it,” he said.


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Article source: http://www.aljazeera.com/news/americas/2013/03/2013312182434631161.html

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NASA to reveal contents of drilled Martian rock

— Drilling into a rock near its landing spot, the Curiosity rover has answered a key question about Mars: The red planet long ago harbored some of the ingredients needed for primitive life to thrive.

Topping the list is evidence of water and basic elements that teeny organisms could feed on, scientists said Tuesday.

“We have found a habitable environment that is so benign and supportive of life that probably if this water was around and you had been on the planet, you would have been able to drink it,” said chief scientist John Grotzinger of the California Institute of Technology.

The discovery comes seven months after Curiosity touched down in an ancient crater. Last month, it flexed its robotic arm to drill into a fine-grained, veiny rock and then tested the powder in its onboard labs.

Curiosity is the first spacecraft sent to Mars that could collect a sample from deep inside a rock, and scientist said they hit pay dirt with that first rock.

Mars today is a hostile, frigid desert, constantly bombarded by radiation. Previous missions have found that the planet was more tropical billions of years ago. And now scientists have their first evidence of a habitable environment outside of Earth.

This was an environment where microbes “could have lived in and maybe even prospered in,” Grotzinger said.

The car-size rover made a dramatic “seven-minutes-of-terror” landing last August near the planet’s equator. As high-tech as Curiosity is, it lacks the tools to detect actual microbes, living or extinct. It can only use its chemistry lab to examine Martian rocks to determine the kind of environment they might have lived in.

The analysis revealed the rock that Curiosity bore into contained a chemical soup of sulfur, hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, phosphorus and simple carbon – essential chemical ingredients for life. Also present were clay and sulfate minerals, signs that the rock formed in a watery environment.

NASA rovers Opportunity and Spirit – before it fell silent – also uncovered evidence of a wet Martian past elsewhere on the planet, but scientists think the water would have been too acidic for microbes.

The ancient water at Curiosity’s pit stop – possibly a former lake bed – appears to be neutral and not too salty. It previously found a hint of the site’s watery past – an old streambed that the six-wheel rover crossed to get to the flat bedrock.

Curiosity has yet to turn up evidence of complex carbon compounds, fundamental to all living things. Scientists said a priority is to search for a place where organics might be preserved.

The drilled rock isn’t far from Curiosity’s landing spot in Gale Crater; the rover is ultimately headed to a mountain in the crater’s middle. Images from space spied signs of clay layers at the base of the mountain – a good spot to hunt for the elusive organics.

It has been slow going as engineers learn to handle the rover, which is far more tech-savvy than anything that has landed before on Earth’s planetary neighbor.

Over the years, Mars spacecraft in orbit and on the surface have beamed back a wealth of information about the planet’s geology. Scientists have also been able to study rocks from Mars that have occasionally landed on Earth.

The latest news comes during a lull in the two-year, $2.5 billion mission. Curiosity has been prevented from doing science experiments as engineers troubleshoot a computer problem.

Scientists still plan to drive toward the mountain, but not until Curiosity drills into another rock at its current location. Since flight controllers on Earth will be out of touch with Mars spacecraft for most of next month due to a planetary alignment, the second drilling won’t get under way until May.

Follow Alicia Chang at http://twitter.com/SciWriAlicia.

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NASA: http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/msl

Follow Alicia Chang at http://twitter.com/SciWriAlicia

Article source: http://www.kentucky.com/2013/03/12/2553478/nasa-to-reveal-contents-of-drilled.html

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Mars Was Once Suitable for Life, NASA Confirms

Curiosity rover successfully drilled into a Martian rock, giving us a peek at the Red Planet’s habitable history. The 1.8-inch-wide scoop of powdered rock revealed that ancient Mars could have supported living microbes.

“We have found a habitable environment that is so benign and supportive of life that, if this water had been around and you had been on the planet, you would have been able to drink it,” said John Grotzinger, Curiosity project scientist.

After breaking down and analyzing the powder, scientists found the rock contained sulfur, nitrogen, hydrogen, oxygen, phosphorus and carbon — all key chemical ingredients for life.

“I think this is probably the only definitively habitable environment [outside of Earth] that we have described and recorded,” said David Blake, principal investigator for Curiosity’s CheMin instrument.

The rock, dubbed “John Klein,” is located in an area called Yellowknife Bay, a very low point of the Gale Crater that scientists have described as a “time-capsule of evidence.” Made up of sedimentary rocks with different textures, the area signals a geologically active planet with a very wet history.

“Clay minerals make up at least 20% of the composition of this sample,” said Blake. That type of material is a product of the reaction of relatively fresh water.

The John Klein rock and its neighbors are a far cry from what scientists saw in 2004 from Opportunity rover, which was parked in a different area of Mars called Endurance Crater. Opportunity determined the rocks in that area were formed from sulfate-rich sandstone, signaling a very acidic ancient aqueous environment that was not habitable.

However, scientists say Curiosity’s location deep in the Gale Crater presents a different story. As lead scientist Michael Meyer put it, Yellowknife Bay is chapter one of Mars’ autobiography.

“We have characterized a very ancient, but strangely new ‘gray Mars’ where conditions once were favorable for life,” says Grotzinger.

You can see the difference in the two areas in the composite image below. The photo on the left is “Wopmay” rock in Endurance Crater, taken by Opportunity’s panoramic camera in 2004; the image on the right from Curiosity’s Mast Camera is of rocks from “Sheepbed” unit in Yellowknife Bay in Gale Crater.

Before this drill, Mars Science Laboratory scientists were careful to not over-promise Curiosity’s mission.

“When you land on Mars, strange things can happen,” says Grotzinger. “I think the positive message here is that we’re getting better at this, and this is not by accident [...] You always need to be careful when you’re working on Mars.”

In November 2012, NPR quoted Grotzinger as saying “this data is gonna be one for the history books.” The interview sparked rumors that Curiosity had found something “earth-shaking” on Mars. However, as Mashable first reported, the statement was taken out of context, and NASA was forced to backtrack to clarify the situation.

When asked Tuesday if Grotzinger had actually known during that infamous NPR interview that these latest results were a possibility, he shook his head laughing and denied any firm knowledge. “I feel better about it now,” he said with relief.

Images courtesy of NASA/JPL

Article source: http://mashable.com/2013/03/12/nasa-mars-suitable-for-life/

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Computer glitch suspends NASA Mars rover operation


CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida |
Mon Mar 4, 2013 7:25pm EST

CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida (Reuters) – A computer glitch, possibly caused by radiation, has put on hold the Mars rover Curiosity’s first attempt to analyze powder from inside an ancient rock, officials said on Monday.

Engineers said they hope the NASA rover can resume limited science operations this week.

“I don’t expect there to be any long-term impact,” project manager Richard Cook told Reuters. But “it’s probably too early to tell.”

The $2.5 billion robotic geology station was in the middle of analyzing its first samples drilled out from the interior of a rock when its primary computer developed a problem on Wednesday.

The craft transmitted the results of four onboard laboratory tests to ground controllers before science operations were suspended, Cook said.

The rover landed inside the Gale Crater impact basin, located near the Martian equator, on August 6, 2012, for a two-year mission to see if the planet most like Earth in the solar system has or ever had the chemistry and conditions to support microbial life.

Engineers over the weekend switched the rover to its identical backup computer system.

On Monday Curiosity was beginning to emerge from the shutdown of all but essential systems following the electronic brain transplant. Meanwhile, troubleshooting on the faulty computer system is under way.

“We plan to do a couple of more checkouts on the original computer, probably on Wednesday,” Cook said.

The problem is in a flash memory system and may have been the result of a radiation hit, he added.

“If I were to guess the most likely cause, that would be it,” Cook said.

Engineers want to restore Curiosity’s damaged computer system so that it can be returned to service as a backup. The rover had been using its A-side computer system since before landing.

The B-side system, now in operation, was last used during Curiosity’s nine-month cruise from Earth to Mars.

Results of the rover’s chemical analysis of the rock sample remain set for release on March 12, lead scientist John Grotzinger wrote in an email to Reuters.

Scientists chose the rock in part because it is shot through with what appear to be minerals that form in the presence of water. Water is believed to be necessary for life.

(Editing by Kevin Gray and Xavier Briand)

Article source: http://www.reuters.com/article/2013/03/05/us-space-mars-idUSBRE92401D20130305

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Mars Curiosity Drills Into Red Planet

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Mars Curiosity has another scientific first under its belt.

The Mini Cooper-sized rover successfully collected a tiny sample of powder – about a tablespoon worth – as it drilled into a Mars rock earlier this month, scientists said today.

“This is the first time any rover has drilled into a rock to collect a sample anywhere but on Earth,” said Louise Jandura, an engineer on the Curiosity team at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory. The Mars Curiosity mission is designed to look for signs that life once existed – or might still exist – on Mars.

When the rock sample is analyzed by Curiosity’s onboard laboratory in coming days, the results will be beamed back to eager scientists on Earth.

The team is already are excited because of signs in the Martian geology suggesting the rocks formed in liquid water, a fundamental requirement for life as we know it.

“The rocks in this area have a really rich geological history, and they have they have the potential to give us information about multiple interactions between water and rock,” said Joel Hurowitz, a Curiosity sampling scientist at NASA JPL.

Photos of the drill site show the traditional rust-colored Martian soil has been brushed away, revealing a moon-gray colored rock underneath.

“It’s better to have a gray color than a red color,” said John Grotzinger, Curiosity’s chief scientist.

Oxidation that turns the soil rust-red destroys organic compounds, Grotzinger explained. Any signs of past life would be more likely protected in the deeper grayish-rock, but Grotzinger said it’s still like looking for a needle in a haystack.

“It’s still an accident of fate to preserve organics,” Grotzinger said on a conference call with reporters.

Curiosity touched down on the red planet in August.

The 2.5 inch hole was drilled Feb. 8 into a rock dubbed “John Klein,” after a deputy project manager who died in 2011.

The $2.5 billion rover will eventually begin driving toward the base of a three-mile-high mountain known as Mt. Sharp.

Article source: http://abcnews.go.com/blogs/technology/2013/02/mars-curiosity-drills-into-red-planet/

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