Curiosity Enters Flat Honeycomb Terrain on Mars for Ancient Climate Clues
Updated
Updated · leonarddavid.com · Jun 29
Curiosity Enters Flat Honeycomb Terrain on Mars for Ancient Climate Clues
2 articles · Updated · leonarddavid.com · Jun 29
Summary
NASA’s Curiosity rover has reached an unusually flat expanse of honeycomb-textured ground on Mars, a formation highlighted as a new target for studying the planet’s past environment.
The terrain resembles playas on Earth, where desiccation cracks form in dry lake beds, giving scientists a comparison point for testing how the Martian textures developed.
Curiosity has seen honeycomb-like rocks before in both distant layers and nearby jumbled formations, but this broader, flatter patch offers a clearer setting for analysis.
That comparison could help researchers reconstruct Mars’s ancient climate and assess whether the area preserves evidence of a wetter history.