The lead scientist for NASA’s Perseverance Mars rover is excited about material that has been stored in the rover’s sample tubes, both dropped on the surface of Mars and contained within the rover itself while wheeling about within Jezero Crater.
Given the samples of Mars that Perseverance has collected so far, could one of those specimens be what the rover was sent to look for in the first place: evidence of past microbial life on the Red Planet?
The preliminary finding heightens the need for returning these Mars samples to Earth, so that these prized collectibles from the Red Planet can be sent to laboratories for more rigorous analysis.
Lively question
Caltech’s Kenneth Farley, project scientist for NASA’s Perseverance Mars rover program, briefed the Extraterrestrial Materials Analysis Group (ExMAG) during a meeting held May 13–15 in Houston, Texas.
Tagged “Lefroy Bay,” Farley called attention to this sample collected by the Perseverance rover, found to have hydrated silica. Here on Earth, that mineral has the highest potential to preserve signs of ancient life.
So a lively question wanting of an answer arises: Perhaps Lefroy Bay carries preserved signs of ancient life on Mars?
Paleoenvieonmental conditions
“The Lefroy Bay sample and two other samples from the same unit — the ‘Margin Unit’ — are onboard Perseverance,” Farley told Space.com. “The Margin Unit samples have abundant carbonate and silica, clearly indicating a dominant role for liquid water in their formation,” he said.
But whether that water was surface water in a lake or river, or groundwater, remains uncertain, Farley added. Either could constitute an ancient (greater than 3.4 billion years old), habitable Martian environment, he said.
These samples host phases that on Earth are very useful for establishing “paleoenvieonmental” conditions, Farley noted, and they can also preserve biosignatures. “As such these samples are uniquely important for return to Earth for further study,” said Farley.
Objective: set in stone
Perseverance is “just about to make a really fundamental transition in the exploration of the environment that we have been working in,” Farley explained in his briefing to the ExMAG. “One of the challenges we face,” he said, “this is not a great terrain for driving a rover across.”
So far, the Mars machinery has traversed some 17 miles (27 kilometers) after it was lowered to the area by skycrane on Feb. 18, 2021. The robot’s objective is set in stone: “Seek signs of ancient life and collect samples of rock and regolith for possible Earth return,” explains NASA.
But why was the 28 mile-wide (45-kilometer) Jezero Crater picked as the reconnoitering spot for the rover?