Spanning the Delta of Mars' Jezero Crater



This 60-second video pans across an enhanced-color composite image, or mosaic, of the delta at Jezero Crater on Mars. The delta formed billions of years ago from sediment that an ancient river carried to the mouth of the lake that once existed in the crater. Taken by the Mastcam-Z instrument aboard NASA’s Perseverance rover, the video begins looking almost due west of the rover, and sweeps to the right until it faces almost due north.
Sixteen images compose the mosaic that provides the base image for this video (included as an additional figure); they were acquired on Nov. 28, 2021 (the 275th sol, or Martian day, of Perseverance’s mission) as the rover sat at the highest vantage point in the “South Séítah” geological unit, allowing a perspective that included boulders and other features atop the delta as well as farther west and northwest across its surface.
For more about Perseverance:
mars.nasa.gov/resources/26428/spanning-the-delta-of-mars-jezero-crater/

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