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Slow and steady does it on Sol 3564
by Catherine O'Connell-Cooper, Planetary Geologist at University of New Brunswick
Pasadena CA (JPL) Aug 15, 2022

This image was taken by Left Navigation Camera onboard NASA's Mars rover Curiosity on Sol 3563.

We are making slow but steady progress through the "Paraitepuy pass," having passed the approximate halfway point over the weekend. Today's one sol plan found us staring around the corner at the neck of the pass and considering our drive path forward.

Sometimes, our drive forward is smooth and flat ... neither word can be used here! Our drive forward has abundant sand and sharp rocks, so finding a safe path is providing our intrepid rover planners with some interesting times! Today's planned drive is roughly 29 metres.

The view from here is quite extraordinary -we are looking at several large buttes, which lie along the side of the pass and in front of us - and it is hard to resist the urge to photograph everything in sight, just like any tourist or traveler!

Mastcam is hard at work again as a result, imaging the butte Orinoco (the large butte on the left of the image - "Kukenan" is the butte at the centre-back of the image), along with two mosaics on the Bolivar butte. ChemCam is using its long distance imager (RMI) to look at the butte "Chenapua" (the edge is just visible on the right hand side of the image).

We parked next to some sand in this plan, so we are spending time to look at grain sizes within the sand patch. Mastcam will image the nicely developed ripple crest ("Blackwater Creek"). The MAHLI target "Sand Creek" and the Mastcam target "Karowrieng" look at the flanks, away from the ripple crest.

This sandy patch has a few float (i.e., loose on the surface) rocks in it. MAHLI will analyze "Nascente," which is a small rock in the middle of the sand patch, right in front of the rover.

Mastcam is imaging a large float rock "Plantain Island," off to the left of the rover, and the float "Pairuwa Islands" within the sand patch, which has some intriguing sand flow patterns. We can compare these float targets to the bedrock ChemCam LIBS target "Corocito" - this may help us determine the origin of the float rocks.

Once our imaging and contact science is complete here today, we will move forward, picking our way along the pass.


Related Links
Curiosity Mars Science Laboratory
Mars News and Information at MarsDaily.com
Lunar Dreams and more


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MARSDAILY
Sol 3565: Over, Around, and Through
Pasadena CA (JPL) Aug 16, 2022
We filled much of today's plan imaging the wonders around and ahead of us as we pick our way through "Paraitepuy Pass" - the towering buttes, geologic relationships, and layers that have drawn our attention for a literal decade. But it is also fun to look back on how we got to where we are. The image above traces a small segment of our path traversing the obstacles that guard the pass - over one of the large ripples, around several large boulders - leading us to a point where we are nearly through ... read more

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