Just three short months into 2022, NASA's Perseverance rover has already collected its second rock sample of the year — and its seventh one of the whole mission. If there's one planet humans have worked tirelessly to explore, it's Mars. The neighboring world has fascinated humans for decades, and as such, we've spent an enormous amount of time and money trying to better understand it. NASA has sent multiple orbiters around the planet, landed rovers on its surface, and plans to send the first humans there in the 2030s.
One rover that's been especially crucial in this research is Perseverance. Since landing on the Martian surface in February 2021, Perseverance has collected an enormous amount of data. It's helped confirm an ancient lake in the Jezero Crater, shared hundreds of thousands of photos, and — most importantly — collected rock samples that'll eventually be sent to Earth. These rock samples hold critical data about Mars' history. If we're lucky, they may even confirm that the Red Planet once had life.
Related: This NASA Photo Of A Mars 'Flower' Is Absolutely Beautiful
Acquiring these rock samples is no easy task, which is why the successful collection of each one is worth celebrating. On March 8, 2022, the Perseverance Twitter account confirmed it had cored and collected its seventh rock sample of the mission. As the Tweet explains, «My rock collection is growing... I’ve got my seventh core sample onboard, drilled from the rock you see here.» The photo above offers a full view of the rock and Perseverance's sampling equipment above it. The picture below provides a closer look at the rock, along with the sample stored safely inside Perseverance.
While each new rock sample is exciting, this seventh one is especially
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