What Created This Mini Book-Shaped Rock on Mars?
A book-shaped rock spotted by the Curiosity rover on Mars is the result of an interplay of wind, waterand the human brain
By Stephanie Pappas on May 17, 2023
NASA's Curiosity Mars rover took this close-up view of a rock nicknamed "Terra Firme" that looks like the open pages of a book, on April 15, 2023. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/MSSS
A cute new photo courtesy of the Mars rover Curiosity shows a miniature book-shaped rock nestled in the soil of the Gale Crater.
The shape is the result of an interplay of wind, waterand the human brain. While many of the rock shapes on Mars hint at a dynamic past, says mineralogist Susanne Schwenzer of the Open University in England, the rocks often objectively look like plain, rounded pebbles. A few, though, remind the human eye of familiar objects. For instance, the Curiosity rover recently captured images of rocks that look like jagged shark teeth and delicate corals.
The human propensity to see familiar objects in ambiguous patterns is called pareidolia. Famously, in 1976 a photo taken from the Viking I spacecraft exemplified this phenomenon on a large scale. The image seemed to show an eerie face peering up from Marss surface. The Face on Mars became a pop culture sensation and fuel for conspiracy theories about alien monuments. Later, higher-resolution photographs with fewer shadows showed a pretty plain mesa.
Curiosity captured the picture of the book rock on April 15. Its a tiny feature, just 2.5 centimeters (about one inch) long. The origin of this miniature sculpture likely stretches back some four billion years, when the sediments that make up the base of Gale Crater were being deposited, Schwenzer says. At the time, the region hosted liquid water that traveled through pores in the rocks, depositing minerals in some spots and dissolving them away from others. This leads to uneven properties within rocks, Schwenzer says, so that when the rocks erode to the point they are on the planets surface and the wind whips against them, they dont wear away evenly. The softer parts weather away quicker, she says.
In the case of the book rock, an ancient fracture might have created the sheetlike page portion of the formation, Schwenzer says. When rocks crack, either because of strain from sediments layered on top of them or because of meteorite strikes, fluids can move into those cracks and deposit new minerals. If those minerals are harder than the surrounding rock, theyll remain after the rest of rock weathers away.
More:
https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/mini-book-rock-spotted-on-mars/