Paydirt at 8-year-old Mars rover’s “new landing site”

Opportunity has found evidence that the original impact that created Endeavour Crater released heated underground water that deposited zinc in fused-together rock fragments around the rim.
By | Published: May 4, 2012 | Last updated on May 18, 2023
Mars-Homestake-vein
This color view of a mineral vein called “Homestake” comes from the panoramic camera (Pancam) on NASA’s Mars Exploration Rover Opportunity. The vein is about the width of a thumb and about 18 inches (45 centimeters) long. Opportunity examined it in November 2011 and found it to be rich in calcium and sulfur, possibly the calcium-sulfate mineral gypsum. Homestake is near the edge of the “Cape York” segment of the western rim of Endeavour Crater.
NASA/JPL-Caltech/Cornell/ASU

A report in the May 4 edition of the journal Science details discoveries Opportunity made in its first four months at the rim of Endeavour Crater, including key findings reported at a geophysics conference in late 2011.

Opportunity completed its original three-month mission on Mars eight years ago. It reached Endeavour last summer, three years after the rover’s science team chose Endeavour as a long-term destination. This crater is about 4 billion years old and 14 miles (22 kilometers) in diameter.

The impact that excavated the crater left a jumble of fused-together rock fragments around the rim. In a chunk brought to the surface by a later, much smaller impact into the rim, Opportunity found evidence that the original impact released heated underground water that deposited zinc in that rock. Later after the impact, cool water flowed through cracks in the ground near the edge of the crater and deposited veins of the mineral gypsum.

“These bright mineral veins are different from anything seen previously on Mars, and they tell a clear story of water flowing through cracks in the rocks,” said lead author Steve Squyres of Cornell University in Ithaca, New York, and the principal investigator for Opportunity. “From landing until just before reaching the Endeavour rim, Opportunity was driving over sandstone made of sulfate grains that had been deposited by water and later blown around by the wind. These gypsum veins tell us about water that flowed through the rocks at this exact spot. It’s the strongest evidence for water that we’ve ever seen with Opportunity.”

For the past four months, the solar-powered rover has been working at one outcrop on the Endeavour rim, called Greeley Haven. Reduced daylight during the martian winter and accumulated dust on the rover’s solar array have kept energy too low for driving. “The days are now growing longer, and the Sun is moving higher in the sky at Endeavour Crater,” said Mars Exploration Rover Project Manager John Callas of NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in  Pasadena, California. “We expect Opportunity to resume driving in the next two months and continue exploring other parts of the crater’s rim.” 

Researchers hope to get Opportunity to one of the deposits of clay minerals that have been detected in Endeavour’s rim by observations from orbit. These minerals could be evidence of a nonacidic wet phase of the region’s environmental history.

“Exploring Endeavour Crater is like having a new landing site,” said JPL’s Timothy Parker, a co-author of the new report. “That’s not just because of the difference in the geology here compared to what we saw during most of the first eight years, but also because there’s a whole vista before us inviting much more exploration.”

Opportunity and its rover twin, Spirit, completed their three-month prime missions on Mars in April 2004. Both rovers continued for years of bonus, extended missions. Both have made important discoveries about wet environments on ancient Mars that may have been favorable for supporting microbial life. Spirit stopped communicating in 2010.