Project manager Richard Cook, of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, said that operating it posed the biggest mechanical challenge since Curiosity's high-drama landing. The drill is the most complex device on the rover and is the last instrument to be used. The drilling, expected to start this month, will dig five holes about two inches (five centimeters) into bedrock the size of a throw rug and then feed the powder created to the rover's two chemistry labs for analysis. But because of the richness of their recent finds, Grotzinger said it may be some months before they begin their trek to Mount Sharp. Mission scientists initially decided to visit the depression, a third of a mile from Curiosity's landing site, on a brief detour before heading to the large mountain at the middle of Gale Crater. Every place we drive exposes fractures and vein fills." Project scientist John Grotzinger, of the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, said during a press conference that the drill area has turned out "to be jackpot unit.
(Related: "Mars Has 'Oceans' of Water Inside?") The first drill sample ever collected on Mars will come from a rockbed shot through with unexpected veins of what appears to be the mineral gypsum.ĭelighted members of the Curiosity science team announced Tuesday that the rover was now in a virtual "candy store" of scientific targets-the lowest point of Gale Crater, called Yellowknife Bay, is filled with many different materials that could have been created only in the presence of water.