Mars orbiter spies rover near martian butte

Scientists using NASA's Curiosity Mars rover are eyeing a rock layer surrounding the base of a small butte, called "Mount Remarkable," as a target for investigating with tools on the rover's robotic arm.
By | Published: April 18, 2014 | Last updated on May 18, 2023
Curiosity rover tracks
NASA’s Curiosity Mars rover and tracks from its driving are visible in this view from orbit, acquired April 11, 2014, by the High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment (HiRISE) camera on NASA’s Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter.
NASA/JPL-Caltech/Univ. of Arizona
Scientists using NASA’s Curiosity Mars rover are eyeing a rock layer surrounding the base of a small butte, called “Mount Remarkable,” as a target for investigating with tools on the rover’s robotic arm.

The rover works near this butte in an image taken April 11, 2014, by the High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment (HiRISE) camera on NASA’s Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter.

The butte stands about 16 feet (5 meters) high. Curiosity’s science team refers to the rock layer surrounding the base of Mount Remarkable as the “middle unit” because its location is intermediate between rocks that form buttes in the area and lower-lying rocks that show a pattern of striations.

martian butte called Mount Remarkable
NASA’s Curiosity Mars rover used its Navigation Camera (Navcam) April 11, 2014, to record this scene of a butte called “Mount Remarkable” and surrounding outcrops at a waypoint called “the Kimberley” inside Gale Crater.
NASA/JPL-Caltech
Depending on what the mission scientists learn from a close-up look at the rock and identification of chemical elements in it, a site on this middle unit may become the third rock that Curiosity samples with its drill. The rover carries laboratory instruments to analyze rock powder collected by the drill. The mission’s first two drilled samples, in an area called Yellowknife Bay near Curiosity’s landing site, yielded evidence last year for an ancient lakebed environment with available energy and ingredients favorable for microbial life.

The rover’s current location, where multiple types of rocks are exposed close together, is called “the Kimberley.” Here and, later at outcrops on the slope of Mount Sharp inside Gale Crater, researchers plan to use Curiosity’s science instruments to learn more about habitable past conditions and environmental changes.