Status Report

NASA Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter HiRISE Imagery Release 30 January 2008

By SpaceRef Editor
January 31, 2008
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NASA Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter HiRISE Imagery Release 30 January 2008
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Onboard NASA’s Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, the HiRISE camera offers unprecedented image quality, giving us a view of the Red Planet in a way never before seen. It’s the most powerful camera ever to leave Earth’s orbit.


Possible Salt Deposits in Noachis Terra
Possible Salt Deposits in Noachis Terra
Salt deposits typically form when water evaporates, suggesting that this might have once been an area favorable for life on Mars.
 
Potential Landing Site in Nili Fossae
Potential Landing Site in Nili Fossae
Exposed clay minerals in this area may be the result of chemical reactions between hot water and rocks.
 
Clay Minerals in the Northwestern Bosporos Montes
Clay Minerals in the Northwestern Bosporos Montes
Such minerals contain water and may have formed under conditions favorable for life.
 
Potential Landing Site Near Mawrth Vallis
Potential Landing Site Near Mawrth Vallis
This image shows a wide variety of scientifically interesting terrains as well as some potential hazards for landing.
 
Layering and Slope Streaks in Henry Crater
Layering and Slope Streaks in Henry Crater
The layers represent the eroded remains of sedimentary rocks that formed from sediments deposited within the crater sometime after its formation.
 
Flooded Terrain in Terra Sabaea
Flooded Terrain in Terra Sabaea
Two distinctly different terrain types are visible in this image of the northern lowlands of Mars.
 
Sources of Basaltic Sand
Sources of Basaltic Sand
Sand dunes are among the most prominent wind-formed features found on Mars.
 
Varied Aeolian Features in Arabia Terra
Varied Aeolian Features in Arabia Terra
A particularly interesting aspect of this site is that there appears to have been multiple styles of wind activity.
 
Aurorae Chaos
Aurorae Chaos
Chaotic terrain is thought to form from subsurface collapse following volatile release.
 


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