Article 68NB2 Curiosity Rover Finds Foot-Long Meteorite on Martian Surface

Curiosity Rover Finds Foot-Long Meteorite on Martian Surface

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Curiosity Rover Finds Foot-Long Meteorite on Martian Surface:

The rock, dubbed Cacao, is made of iron and nickel, NASA says.

Cacao was first spotted on January 27, in the shadow of the Curiosity rover. The next day, Curiosity repositioned itself to better image the large rock.

It's not the first meteorite Curiosity has spotted. In 2014, the rover found an iron meteorite (nicknamed Lebanon) that measured about 6.5 feet across, and in 2016, it came across a golf ball-sized meteorite nicknamed Egg Rock on the planet's Mount Sharp.

Iron meteorites like these regularly crop up on Earth and have caused stirs throughout human history. Japanese emperors and the pharaoh Tutankhamun had weapons forged from iron meteorites.

There's no way to date the meteorites, the rover team said on Twitter, but the newly discovered rock "could have been here millions of years!"

Cacao was found on Curiosity's 3,724th sol. The rover arrived on Mars in August 2012, and since then has explored the planet's Gale Crater and Mount Sharp, a 3-mile-high mountain in the crater's center.

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