
NASA's Curiosity rover spots coral-like rock on Mars — here's what it really means
According to a report by NASA, the image was taken on July 24, 2025, during the rover's 4,609th day on the Martian surface.
At first glance, it may seem like a curious shape. But behind this formation lies a much older and more detailed story– one that stretches back billions of years to a time when Mars was a very different place.
Ancient water and wind: The forces that shaped it
According to the NASA report, this type of structure is the result of a common geological process.
In the distant past, when liquid water still existed on Mars, it seeped into cracks in rocks. That water carried dissolved minerals, which settled into the cracks and stayed behind once the water dried up.
— astrobiobuzz (@astrobiobuzz)
Over time, the surrounding rock, which was less resistant, was worn away by continuous wind erosion– leaving the mineral deposits exposed in unusual shapes. These formations, while shaped by natural forces, are often visually complex and have been compared to floral or marine structures found on Earth, as per the NASA report.
by Taboola
by Taboola
Sponsored Links
Sponsored Links
Promoted Links
Promoted Links
You May Like
Brain tumor has left my son feeling miserable; please help!
Donate For Health
Donate Now
Undo
Close-up Captured by ChemCam
According to the report, the image of the coral-like rock was taken using the Remote Micro Imager (RMI), a component of the ChemCam instrument aboard Curiosity. ChemCam plays a key role in helping scientists study the composition and texture of rocks from a distance.
Around the same period, another rock with a similar form was observed using Curiosity's Mars Hand Lens Imager, adding more detail to this ongoing study of Martian geology.
According to the NASA report, the ChemCam itself is the result of an international partnership– developed by the U.S. Department of Energy's Los Alamos National Laboratory, in collaboration with the French space agency CNES, the University of Toulouse, and CNRS.
A mission that keeps delivering
Curiosity, which landed on Mars in 2012, continues to operate from NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in California. The rover is part of NASA's Mars Science Laboratory project and operates under the broader Mars Exploration Program, led by the agency's Science Mission Directorate in Washington.
Not just an odd shape
While the rock's shape has drawn interest due to its resemblance to coral, the real significance lies in what it tells us about Mars. Formations like these offer evidence that water once played an active role in shaping the Martian surface.
Wind, minerals, and erosion have combined over billions of years to create the landscapes that Curiosity continues to explore today. This latest find is another reminder of how much Mars has changed– and how much there is still to understand.
Thumb image: X/@astrobiobuzz

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Time of India
41 minutes ago
- Time of India
Venus and Jupiter ‘kiss' in the sky: Know the best time and place to watch the planetary conjunction
The universe is dynamic and constantly moving and so are the galaxies enclosed in it. But what if two huge spiral galaxies draw closer, due to their gravity and pull everything around them into detailed orbital patterns. This is not just fiction, it teaches us about the grand future awaiting our own Milky Way. Recently, astronomers studied this distant 'dance' of the Milky Way and a neighbouring galaxy that helps us understand how galactic structures form and evolve. Galaxies are doing their cosmic 'dance' but for what? According to the study is published in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, under a collaboration between the University of Queensland and the Australian National University, astronomers Delegate survey, have turned their telescopes toward a cosmic neighborhood inhabited by two spirals, NGC 5713 and NGC 5719. These galaxies are currently in the late stages of merging, roughly 3 billion years ahead of the collision we forecast between the Milky Way and Andromeda. Dr. Sarah Sweet, leading the survey, says in the study, 'The Milky Way will merge with Andromeda and their respective smaller dwarf galaxies in the next 2.5 billion years … we don't know how typical it is,'. To examine this, the team studied NGC 5713 and NGC 5719, observing how their dwarf satellite galaxies dance around them. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Online Skin Care Consultation - Learn More AskLayers Learn More Undo According to Dr. Sweet, 'This paper shows these galaxies—NGC5713 and NGC5719—combine as if they were dancing with the closely located dwarf satellites rotating around them' , as reported by the Australian National University. Why does that matter? Dr. Sweet also says, 'Without such a merger, the galaxies might remain in a randomly distributed cloud, not arranged in beautiful, coherent planes like those around the Milky Way and Andromeda'. This structured arrangement among satellites tells about a pattern that might surface in our own Local Group. Professor Helmut Jerjen of Australian National University says to the University reporter, 'We will test whether the Milky Way and Andromeda Local Group is a poster child or a cosmic outlier'. He says that current models struggle to replicate how dwarf galaxies align in satellite planes, suggesting our simulations may need a serious update. Why do galactic mergers happen? Galaxy mergers happen simply because of gravity. Galaxies move through space, and when two drift close enough, their mutual gravitational pull draws them together, eventually leading to a collision or merger. According to NASA, as the galaxies merge, gravitational forces simultaneously change their shapes, release streams of stars and gas or 'tidal tails', and compress gas clouds. If the colliding galaxies don't pass through cleanly, they coalesce into a single larger galaxy, often changing spirals into elliptical or irregular shapes. Such mergers also funnel gas toward their centers, feeding central black holes and sometimes triggering dramatic changes.

Mint
an hour ago
- Mint
Perseid meteor shower: When, where and how to watch hundreds of shooting stars as Venus, Jupiter converge? Check details
The Perseid meteor shower is famous for its bright meteors that often leave long, glowing trails. While in past years the shower has delivered around 40 to 50 visible meteors per hour, this year's display is expected to be less impressive, according to Bill Cooke, head of NASA's Meteoroid Environments Office. The reduced visibility is due to the timing of the shower, which comes just after August's full moon, its brightness likely obscuring many of the meteors from view. 'The average person under dark skies could see somewhere between 40 and 50 Perseids per hour. Instead, you're probably going to see 10 to 20 per hour or fewer, and that's because we have a bright Moon in the sky washing out the fainter meteors,' Cooke said. He added, "You're not going to see Perseids around suppertime. You're going to have to go out later. Look anywhere but at the Moon.' According to Meteor expert Robert Lunsford from the American Meteor Society mentioned, 'The best rates will probably be near 15 per hour, as dim meteors make up a majority of the activity.' Meteors can also be visible as early as 10 pm local time as per NASA. "You can watch for long Perseid earth grazers as soon as it gets dark until the moon begins to interfere. This will be about an hour for most folks," Lunsford added. According to Finn Burridge, a science communicator at the Royal Observatory Greenwich, the Perseid meteor shower in 2025 peaks during the nights of August 11–12 and August 12–13. Viewing of the Perseids takes place until August 23. You can watch livestreaming of Perseid meteor shower on YouTube. For the best chance to see a meteor shower, head outside during the early predawn hours, when the sky is darkest and the moon is low or not visible. Avoid bright light sources, as they can hinder your view. A dark, cloudless night during a new moon or when the moon is at its smallest offers the clearest conditions. And remember to keep your eyes on the sky, not your phone. Your vision adjusts better to the dark when you're not distracted by bright screens, making it easier to spot shooting stars. Meteor showers occur when Earth moves through bands of dust and debris left in space by comets or asteroids. The Perseid meteor shower comes from Comet Swift–Tuttle, which takes about 133 years to complete a full orbit around the Sun. As Earth crosses the path of debris left by this comet, tiny particles enter our atmosphere at speeds of roughly 37 miles (59 kilometers) per second. When they hit the atmosphere, they burn up, creating the bright flashes we see as meteors.


Time of India
an hour ago
- Time of India
‘Alien: Earth' creator Noah Hawley reveals why he introduced new creatures and how it is linked to AI, Tesla and Thomas Edison
FX's upcoming sci-fi series Alien: Earth aims to recreate the sense of shock and horror that made Ridley Scott 's 1979 Alien a classic. But with seven films and two crossover movies already revealing much about the franchise's alien creatures, creator Noah Hawley says new challenges demanded new ideas. 'I've managed somehow to have this niche of reinventing classic movies as television shows. If I have a skill at it, it's in understanding what the original movie made me feel and why,' Hawley told reporters in May. 'Seven movies later, there's no discovery or mystery in the life cycle of this creature, so that feeling the audience has is unavailable to me, which is why I felt I had to introduce new creatures.' Finance Value and Valuation Masterclass - Batch 4 By CA Himanshu Jain View Program Artificial Intelligence AI For Business Professionals Batch 2 By Ansh Mehra View Program Finance Value and Valuation Masterclass - Batch 3 By CA Himanshu Jain View Program Artificial Intelligence AI For Business Professionals By Vaibhav Sisinity View Program Finance Value and Valuation Masterclass - Batch 2 By CA Himanshu Jain View Program Finance Value and Valuation Masterclass Batch-1 By CA Himanshu Jain View Program Ridley Scott's input on new creatures David W. Zucker, Alien: Earth executive producer and chief creative officer for Scott Free, said Ridley Scott's main concern was whether these new additions could be as impactful as the original Xenomorph. 'Ridley, candidly, his biggest concern for Noah and this series was the ambition to build out these other creatures — the necessity of that but also just how steep that challenge is to pull off in a way that is impactful but also that really taps into your imagination,' Zucker said. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Undo Like the 1979 film, the new series does not reveal how these creatures live or reproduce. Instead, it shows that they are the last thing anyone would want crash-landing on Earth. Plot set before the original 'Alien' Set two years before Alien, the series follows Wendy (Sydney Chandler), the first human to have her consciousness transferred to a synthetic body. When a space vessel carrying alien specimens crashes on Earth, Wendy and a group of hybrids step in to respond. Alongside the alien threat, they face powerful corporations that could be as dangerous as the creatures themselves. Live Events You Might Also Like: 'It's 100% crap': Ex-Google exec rejects tech CEOs' rosy claims that AI will bring a golden age, warns even they aren't safe 'One of the reasons that 'Alien' was so exciting to me to adapt was that it's not just a monster movie. It's that moment [in the first movie] where Ash is revealed to be an Android,' Hawley said. 'You realize that humanity is trapped between this parasitic primordial past and the AI future, and they're both trying to kill us.' Corporate rivalries and hybrid characters Hawley began work on the project in 2018 and drew inspiration from the late 19th-century rivalry between Nikola Tesla, Thomas Edison, and George Westinghouse. 'It certainly seems like we're in a race for a global monopoly. There's usually a last step, which is a few players left all competing,' Hawley said. 'I thought, 'What if we make it that moment, technologically, of what's next for humanity?'' Wendy, while physically an adult, has the mental and emotional maturity of a 12-year-old. Hawley said this perspective allowed the story to explore humanity's worth through the eyes of children. 'Let the children navigate the discovery both of what these creatures are and then, also, what it means to be a grownup on some level,' he said. Ridley Scott's reaction to recreated sets Hawley has yet to meet Ridley Scott in person, but the director, who serves as an executive producer, reviewed footage and episodes during production. Zucker said Scott was especially impressed with the faithful recreation of original sets. 'I sent him some shots when he was shooting production in Hungary, and he was just, 'Well, f–k me. I built that, and it's still there all these years later,'' Zucker said. 'One of the things among many I know he's grateful to Noah about is, in the credits, there's acknowledgment for some of those original designers who put that ship set together.'