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Guy Webster 818-354-6278
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.

News Release: 2006-148                                          Dec. 13, 2006

NASA Spacecraft Read Layered Clues to Changes on Mars  
 
SAN FRANCISCO -- Layers on Mars are yielding history lessons revealed by 
instruments flying overhead and rolling across the surface. 
 
Some of the first radar and imaging results from NASA's newest Mars spacecraft, 
the 
Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, show details in layers of ice-rich deposits near 
the poles. 
Observed variations in the layers' thickness and composition will yield 
information about 
recent climate cycles on the red planet. 
 
NASA's Mars Exploration Rover Opportunity has photographed patterns in the 
layering 
of crater-wall cliffs that are the clearest evidence of ancient sand dunes the 
rover has seen 
since arriving at Mars nearly three years ago. The science team for 
Opportunity's twin, 
Spirit, is using new orbital images of the rover's surroundings to interpret 
how some 
rocks with minerals altered by water fit into the area's complex layered 
structure.  
 
"The combination of instruments on Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter is such a great 
advantage," said Dr. Jack Mustard of Brown University, Providence, R.I. He is 
deputy 
principal investigator for the Compact Reconnaissance Imaging Spectrometer for 
Mars, a 
mineral-identifying instrument on Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter. Researchers are 
using 
mineral information from analyses of spectrometer observations, combined with 
images 
from the orbiter's High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment, to seek the 
source of the 
mineral gypsum in dunes near the Martian north pole and clay minerals 
elsewhere. 
Gypsum and clay minerals are indicators of formerly wet conditions. 
 
Other new images from that camera show mysterious pitting in the layered 
terrain near 
the north pole. Nearby, a steep slope exposing the layers appears to be 
shedding blocks of 
icy material that disappear instead of accumulating at the bottom of the slope. 
 
 
"Observations of the polar layered deposits are telling us about the material 
properties 
there," said Dr. Ken Herkenhoff of the U.S. Geological Survey, Flagstaff, Ariz. 
"These 
deposits record relatively recent climate variations on Mars, like recent ice 
ages on 
Earth." 
 
The Shallow Subsurface Radar instrument on Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter has 
begun 
probing through similar layered deposits at Mars' south pole. "The radar is 
penetrating 
through the entire thickness of these deposits and revealing the fine-scale 
internal 
layering," said Dr. Roger Phillips of Washington University, St. Louis, the 
deputy team 
leader for that instrument.

Far from the poles, Opportunity is navigating the scalloped rim of Victoria 
crater about 
half a mile in diameter, stopping at promontories along the way to look at 
cliff walls of 
adjacent promontories. The top part of the stack of layers exposed in the 
cliffs appears to 
be rocky rubble thrown outward by the impact that dug the crater. "We see an 
abrupt 
transition between the jumbled-up material and intact layers below it that are 
still in place 
from before the impact," said Dr. Steve Squyres of Cornell University, Ithaca, 
N.Y., 
principal investigator for the rovers. Some of the intact layering resembles 
fossilized 
dunes in the U.S. Southwest.   
 
Spirit recently found water-altered minerals in disturbed soils and granular 
rocks near 
where the rover spent the Martian winter. An image of the region from Mars 
Reconnaissance Orbiter is aiding interpretation of how different parts of the 
terrain, such 
as a bright platform nicknamed "Home Plate," are related to others. "It appears 
likely that 
these rocks came from one or more volcanic explosions that produced 'Home 
Plate,'" said 
Dr. Ray Arvidson, also of Washington University, deputy principal investigator 
for the 
rovers.  
 
Dr. John Callas of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif., project 
manager 
for the rovers, said, "The biggest news about the health of the rovers is that 
it is 
essentially unchanged from nine months ago. Each rover has operated more than 
1,000 
Martian days on the surface of Mars. They are well past their original design 
life of 90 
Martian days, and there is always the possibility that a critical component on 
either rover 
could stop functioning at any time, so we operate the rovers with that in mind 
and value 
each additional day they continue to work." 
 
Researchers are describing the latest findings of Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter 
and the 
twin rovers today at the American Geophysical Union meeting in San Francisco.  
New 
images from the orbiter and rovers can be seen at: 
http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/MRO/news/mro-20061213.html .

JPL, a division of the California Institute of Technology, manages the Mars 
Reconnaissance Orbiter and Mars Exploration Rover missions for the NASA Science 
Mission Directorate, Washington.  Lockheed Martin Space Systems, Denver, is the 
prime 
contractor for the orbiter. The Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics 
Laboratory, 
Laurel, Md., provided and operates the Compact Reconnaissance Imaging 
Spectrometer.  
The High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment is operated by the University of 
Arizona, Tucson, and the instrument was built by Ball Aerospace and Technology 
Corp., 
Boulder, Colo. The Shallow Subsurface Radar was provided by the Italian Space 
Agency 
and its operations are led by the INFOCOM Dept., University of Rome "La 
Sapienza." 

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