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Perseverance Detects Complex Carbon on Jezero Rock Surface

Earth lab tests are needed to determine whether Jezero’s newly found complex carbon formed biologically.

Overview

  • A Science Advances paper published June 24 reported that SHERLOC mapped macromolecular carbon in two Bright Angel mudstones, the most robust organic signal yet identified in Jezero Crater.
  • One detection was made on the exposed Cheyava Falls rock surface and the other inside a nearby mudstone using ultraviolet Raman and fluorescence mapping.
  • The organics appear in different mineral settings, with one sample in a silicate matrix and the other associated with carbonate and sulfate minerals, which suggests multiple emplacement or alteration events.
  • SHERLOC cannot distinguish biological from non-biological origins, and researchers highlight plausible abiotic sources such as meteorite delivery, hydrothermal chemistry, or geologic alteration.
  • Perseverance has cached key samples including the 'Sapphire Canyon' core for possible return to Earth but a January overhaul of the Mars Sample Return plan has left the timing and method of sample return uncertain.