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Mars rocks collected by Perseverance rover boost case for alien life

  • Two samples show signs of contact with water for a long period, revealing a potentially habitable environment in ancient times
  • Nasa is hoping to return the samples to Earth for in depth lab analysis sometime in the 2030s

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An image taken by Nasa’s Perseverance rover on Tuesday shows two holes where the rover's drill obtained chalk-size samples from a Martian rock. Nasa/JPL-Caltech handout via AFP
Agence France-Presse

Nasa’s Perseverance Mars rover has now collected two rock samples, with signs that they were in contact with water for a long period of time boosting the case for ancient life on the red planet.

“It looks like our first rocks reveal a potentially habitable sustained environment,” said Ken Farley, project scientist for the mission, in a statement Friday. “It’s a big deal that the water was there for a long time.”

The six-wheeled robot collected its first sample, dubbed “Montdenier” on September 6, and its second, “Montagnac”, from the same rock on September 8.

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Both samples, slightly wider than a pencil in diameter and about 6cm long, are now stored in sealed tubes in the rover’s interior.

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Nasa releases first video of dramatic Mars landing by Perseverance rover

Nasa releases first video of dramatic Mars landing by Perseverance rover

A first attempt at collecting a sample in early August failed after the rock proved too crumbly to withstand Perseverance’s drill.

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The rover has been operating in a region known as the Jezero Crater, just north of the equator and home to a lake 3.5 billion years ago, when conditions on Mars were much warmer and wetter than today.

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