NASA reveals Mars rover has discovered something of ‘immense scientific interest’ unlike anything we’ve seen before

  • NASA’s Perseverance Rover has made an amazing new discovery
  • According to the Space Agency, it is of ‘immense scientific interest’
  • It gives us another look into the vast history of Mars and outer space

Published on Feb 10, 2025 at 10:14 PM (UTC+4)
by Daisy Edwards

Last updated on Feb 10, 2025 at 10:16 PM (UTC+4)
Edited by Tom Wood

NASA reveals surface of Mars
X/NASA, JPL-Caltech, Simeon Schmauß

While it’s not quite a new alien race or a signs of life on Mars, the Perseverance Rover has made a brand new discovery of ‘immense scientific interest’, according to NASA.

The Mars rover has spent five years travelling the Red Planet’s surface to learn more about it and what secrets it held.

In early February, NASA’s Science Editorial Team released an exciting update about the rover’s whereabouts and what it had recently discovered.

The discovery is the newest and tiniest insight into a planet we still know so little about.

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NASA’s discovery of immense scientific interest

After five years of working hard on Mars, the Perseverance Rover has made a fresh new discovery directly on the surface.

Perseverance landed in the Jezero Crater and has been investigating inside that area across all 28 miles and slightly further away, north of the Martian equator.

The rover visited an area in the crater called Blue Hill because the rocks there are of ‘immense scientific interest’ and NASA hoped that Perseverance would be able to successfully core and extract a sample of these special rock samples.

The rover was able to successfully core and seal a 2.9 centimeter rock sample from Blue Hill, much to the excitement of NASA scientists.

The sample is rich in low-calcium pyroxene (LCP) which is incredibly rare on Mars, and Blue Hill is the only location in the rover’s journey where rocks like these can be found, so it’s a ‘one of a kind’ discovery.

Keep roving on

The Perseverance Rover is – unironically – persevering on and continuing to discover new rock samples on the surface of Mars, after a successful discovery of immense scientific interest.

The space agency was pleased to announce that the rover’s journey will continue on down into ‘nearby serpentine bearing outcrops’ in 2025 as it is the Chinese New Year of the Snake and it feels like a ‘poetic alignment of science and tradition’.

Each new discovery is bringing NASA more information about Mars’ interesting past and through them, we get to learn the mysteries of space.

Thanks, Perseverance Rover!

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Daisy Edwards is a Content Writer at supercarblondie.com. Daisy has more than five years’ experience as a qualified journalist, having graduated with a degree from Goldsmiths, University of London and a dissertation in vintage electric vehicles. Daisy specializes in writing about cars, EVs, tech and luxury lifestyle.