Remember when NASA researchers discovered that an ancient lake once existed on Mars?

It was further proof life could exist on the Red Planet
A surprising discovery
Not a shocking discovery
It was still a little surprising...
The clearest evidence yet of ancient water on Mars
Wave-formed rocks prove the Red Planet had lakes
What NASA is saying
Marker Band Valley
Discovered while ascending Mount Sharp
Why scientists were surprised
Evidence Mars was once filled with water
No better evidence exists
We've never seen evidence like this
Ancient Mars was much like Earth is today
Curiosity's history
An extended mission
Curiosity already proved Mars was once home to microbial life
It was further proof life could exist on the Red Planet

Does life exist outside on planets other than the Earth? This may be one of humanity's biggest unanswered questions, but researchers got closer to an answer in 2023 when they discovered something remarkable on Mars.

A surprising discovery

Shortly after the new year, the team of scientists operating NASA's Mars Curiosity Rover found what they believed was the best evidence yet that the dusty Red Planet was once home to an ancient shallow lake.

Not a shocking discovery

The discovery didn’t come as a complete shock to the scientific community since Curiosity was searching an area of Mars known as the Sulfite-Bearing Unit, a place many thought would provide the best evidence of the planet’s watery past.

It was still a little surprising...

Researchers were still surprised by what they found in the Sulfite-Bearing Unit, however, since most believed the area would only reveal evidence of “mere trickles of water” according to Jackie Wattles of CBS News. 

The clearest evidence yet of ancient water on Mars

Scientists believed the rocks there formed as the surface of the red planet was drying out. Instead, the rover found some of the clearest evidence yet of ancient waters,” Wattles wrote. 

Wave-formed rocks prove the Red Planet had lakes

The evidence Wattles was referring to was the discovery of wave-marked rocks that NASA said could only have been formed by a shallow lake that once covered the area. 

What NASA is saying

"Billions of years ago, waves on the surface of a shallow lake stirred up sediment at the lake bottom, over time creating rippled textures left in rock," a NASA news release read at the time. 

Marker Band Valley

Images of the wave-marked rocks were taken by Curiosity in an area of the Sulfite-Bearing Unit researchers called the Marker Band Valley according to Wattles. 

Discovered while ascending Mount Sharp

“The wave-marked rocks were found about one-half mile (800 meters) into Curiosity's ascent of Mount Sharp,” Wattles added. 

Why scientists were surprised

"As the rover climbed higher, it traveled over rocks that would have formed more recently. That's why researchers didn't expect to see such clear markers of a large body of water,” Wattles continued. 

Evidence Mars was once filled with water

The discovery of rocks that could have only been formed by the waves of a large body of water has provided researchers with some of the most compelling evidence they’ve ever had to prove Mars was once a planet covered in water like Earth. 

No better evidence exists

"This is the best evidence of water and waves that we've seen in the entire mission," said NASA Jet propulsion Senior Scientist Ashwin Vasavada in a statement.

We've never seen evidence like this

"We climbed through thousands of feet of lake deposits and never saw evidence like this—and now we found it in a place we expected to be dry," Vasavada added. 

Ancient Mars was much like Earth is today

“The wave ripples, debris flows, and rhythmic layers all tell us that the story of wet-to-dry on Mars wasn’t simple,” Vasavada continued. “Mars’ ancient climate had a wonderful complexity to it, much like Earth’s.”

Curiosity's history

The Curiosity Mars Rover mission landed on Mars in August 2012 and has been gathering data on the Red Planet for more than ten-and-a-half years. 

An extended mission

Originally, Curiosity was only slated to explore Mars for two years but its mission was extended indefinitely. "We will continue to operate Curiosity as long as it's scientifically viable," NASA's Associate Administrator for Science John Grunsfled said at the time. 

Curiosity already proved Mars was once home to microbial life

According to NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory website, Curiosity’s original mission was to discover if Mars was ever “habitable to microbial life,” something the rover proved early in its mission according to NASA’s website. 

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