When this news broke my first thought was "I can't wait for what Mar Guy will make of this!" And lo and behold, a fire and brimstone special episode! Thank you so much for this!
So glad to know that this is your go-to channel for Mars news! Glad I could deliver for you. And thanks much for showing your support and appreciation for this channel. Much appreciated.
I like the images from both rovers, which are both of overwhelming quality. The longvity of these rovers is astonishing, Curiosity already for 12 years and Perseverance for more than 3 years. I hope Perseverance will also be active for more than one decade.
Curiosity has been there for 12 years? God time flies. I didn’t realize there was such a big gap between the two though, now I’m wondering why they are so similar. I understand perseverance has some different things, but it’s not that much different. It’s not almost a decade worth of technology different.
My assumption is that it formed near a volcanic vent, then travelled to it's current location via an asteroid impact at the volcano where it formed as part of the ejecta blanket.
Hello Curiosity!!!! It's so good to see you here on this channel! Thank you, Mars Guy, for the update on Curiosity. As much as I love Perseverance, all our rovers need their time in the limelight. We mustn't forget any of them. All the hard work and information the rovers and their teams bring to us is invaluable. Mars Guy, you're the best!!
I've seen NASA report on the same thing, namely the discovery of pure sulfur on Mars by Curiosity. Well, to be frank, your report is much more informative, concise with better narration. I wish it would be longer. Thanks!
@@twonumber22 I know - and I'm very grateful they put virtually everything online - I've been so giddy with the Bennu papers... But if one has a daytime job one does not always have the time to listen to hours long lectures or read papers. MarGuy is a bona fide geologist, doing a TLDR without dumbing things down too much. Or making it too 'entertaining'
If these are sedimentary beds, it would be even more interesting, as the pure sulphur in those deposits is thought to be derived from bacterial action on gypsum and anhydrite (both are calcium sulphates). There are deposits of that type in Texas.
@@DUKE_of_RAMBLE his very first or so episode had him doing a complete episode like that, but IIRC it was waaaay too costly to continue in that style. Maybe now with more followers and income, short snippets have become affordable.
It is so exciting to see light and whitish rocks amidst so many dark and reddish ones. As soon as I saw the image elsewhere, I pined for it to be Sunday and Mars Guy's elucidation. Thank you.
Brimstone areas on earth are smelling terribly like sulfur dioxide. Would this sulfur on mars smell at all without the presence of oxide? What a great video again. For me exactly the right balance between information and entertainment. Keep on going like this. You don't need millions of klicks, you are doing the best for us 36K subscribers with your high quality information! Thanx for all of that!
Thanks @drguenther for being among the selective viewers! And it's actually H2S, hydrogen sulfide that has the rotten egg smell, which forms from volcanic emissions even without oxygen in the atmosphere.
Thank you. I have been looking at the raw images of MAHLI instrument and couldn't wrap my head around what I was seeing. Pure as a tear sulfur crystal. How is that possible? The hues and layers inside the fragments, pure joy for the eye. I need more of this. Let the Curiousity have the better of it and smack the next porous rock, in slow motion). I want to savour every millisecond). I want some UV light at night again, please). I know it's impossible but i also want the sun to illuminate it from behind, so that the sun rays would shine through. Thank you for the episode!
It may not bubble itself, but from liberating gas from the surface it flows over. You can see it by tossing molten aluminum on seeming dry concrete or lead on wood.
Thanks for putting together this excellent discussion on the background and importance of the surprising discovery of pure sulfur rocks by Curiosity in a short time. Your last comment about no chance of fire for this brimstone might be a clue to how this sulfur ended up in these rocks. The lack of oxygen in the atmosphere of Mars must affect the chemistry of some rocks at the surface.
04:19 Awesome imaging. I am in my armchair, yet a big budget, plus an excellence of engineering, plus an intellect in imaging (sorry, getting poetic here) have enabled me to see sulphur on Mars in such detail. I am from New Zealand and appreciate the formations I have seen many times getting a mention.
It's very nice to see Mars Guy animated now :-) . By the way, the yellow coloring and sulfur vapor can also be seen on the Nea Kameni volcanic island, which lies in the Caldera in front of the famous Greek island of Santorini (Thira) in the Aegean Sea (I visited this in 2006).
This may be outside of your expertise but as you mentioned the low oxygen on Mars I thought I'd ask! Before the Oxidisation of the Earth's atmosphere how did lack of oxygen affect Volcanic Lava flows? I presume fire wasn't possible so did Lava react to the atmosphere the same way as it does to sea water in forming hard crust pillows or did the lack of oxygen have no effect and it flowed the same?
Sulfur is a versatile element that could be used in various ways by humans on Mars. Here are some potential applications: 1. Food production: Sulfur is an essential nutrient for plants, and Mars' soil lacks it. Adding sulfur to the Martian soil could help support plant growth, making it possible to grow food for human consumption. 2. Energy storage: Sulfur has the ability to store energy in the form of sulfuric acid, which could be used as a battery or fuel cell. This could provide a sustainable source of energy for Martian settlements. 3. Water purification: Sulfur can be used to remove impurities from water, making it safe for human consumption. This could be particularly useful on Mars, where water is scarce and purification is crucial. 4. Medical applications: Sulfur has antibacterial and antifungal properties, making it useful for treating infections and wounds. It could also be used to create medical supplies, such as bandages and dressings. 5. Construction materials: Sulfur can be used to create building materials, such as concrete and mortar, which could be used to construct habitats and infrastructure on Mars. 6. Propulsion: Sulfur can be used as a fuel additive to improve the efficiency of propulsion systems, such as rocket engines. 7. Radiation shielding: Sulfur has been shown to have radiation shielding properties, making it a potential material for protecting humans and equipment from harmful radiation on Mars. 8. Bioregenerative systems: Sulfur can be used to create bioregenerative systems, which could recycle air, water, and waste on Mars, making it possible for humans to live sustainably on the planet. Some potential ways to obtain sulfur on Mars include: 1. Mining: Sulfur deposits could be mined from Martian rocks and soil. 2. Recycling: Sulfur could be recycled from waste materials, such as rocket fuel and other industrial processes. 3. In-situ resource utilization: Sulfur could be extracted from Martian rocks and soil using in-situ resource utilization (ISRU) techniques, which involve processing local resources to create the materials needed for human exploration and settlement. Overall, sulfur is a versatile element that could play a crucial role in supporting human life on Mars.
When I was hearing articles talking about green crystals being found on Mars I didn’t even read them because I thought it was bs but dang that’s cool that Curisoity actually found green crystallized sulfur.
2:45 Those sulfur crystals sure look amazing. Also, Curiosity must weigh a lot to be able to crush that rock so nicely, but maybe the strength of the rock wasn't strong either, not bonded well. Thanks for my Sunday fix on all things Mars! 👍💪✌
6 wheels to spread the load too if memory serves so notionally 60kg per wheel. That said the wheels are metal so the point loading as they roll over is presumably immense.
Geology field trip I burned my fingers looking for sulfur crystals on small cliff. The low 5 foot face had steam vents that created small crystal complexes. We were at China Lake Naval Weapons Testing center. (With permission). It was a small competition to find a good one. I tapped the face with my hand pick and unexpectedly opened a steam vent right at the handle. Ouch. Bummer. Not a major burn. Just a hurting for a while.
Was waiting for this video, too. Great new discovery! Still don't understand how MG has only 36K subs? I hope ALL of you watching are subscribed!! Share this dedicated creator, folks!
A lucky accident - the rover crushing a rock - leads to the discovery of pure sulfur rocks in a non-volcanic area, where they shouldn't even be. Interesting!
This is one of the reasons that we need human scientists on that planet, because a lot more is hidden underneath all that orange dust that covers everything.
I'm NO expert, but that site on Mars looked to me like an impact site, compete with the risen middle portion (Mt Sharp). One only has to look towards the Moon for similar structures. _(at least that's what it immediately reminded me of)_ So could it be that the site had indeed been hit, where a subsurface sulfur deposit had been liquefied, which then flowed over a vent of sublimating CO2 and that's what created the "air pockets" in the cooled sulfur?
Rite Mars Dude, Glad you kept your helmet on for this episode! If you hadn't mentioned @ 2:46 that this was sulfur crystals I'd have thought it was a plant! TFS, GB :)
Thank youuuu for your video of the history of this world or some of it 💕 it was really interesting to watch it and see how much it has changed since then ❤️ thank youuuu and thank youuuu
Sudbury crater on earth generated sulfide melts, which are still mined for Cu and Ni today. Perhaps this sulfur is a remnant of the gale crater impact event, instead of volcanic activity.
Yeah, that's what I was thinking. Was water flowing on Mars when the Crater formed? That's a big Crater, lots of residual heat would create hot springs. Sulfur Nevada, you can find nice sulfur crystals formed by hot ground water springs long ago.
@@DigDougDig Well in the case of Sudbury, it was literal sulfide melt, not hotsprings. Sulfides are of course no elemental S, so I put no weigh behind this hypothesis. Although it could probably be enough that molten rock that filled the crater after the impact degassed sulphur like a regular basaltic lava flow would. Larger sulphur deposits are also found near volcanic lakes. So deposition in a water filled crater lake can also be an option.
If it is truly not a volcano and just setamentary rock, You have your answer. Elamental sulfur has a density of 2.07 g/cc. resting a fair distance between 1.873 g/cc Cesium Cs 55 2.07 g/cc Sulfur S 16 2.26 g/cc Carbon C 6 I would stand to reason that it settaled out all into one location after whatever event brought it to the crater from upstream.
The discovery of free sulfur, in larger quantities, on Mars, is very interesting. Sulfur forms the basis for one of the strongest concrete types "Sulfur concrete" that can easily be used for 3D printing of buildings on Mars.
Would the lower air density help allow the formation of bubbles? I am sure you would of mentioned that if it was true Anytime new evidence shows greater complexity just makes me excited
It floats and could have been deposited by ancient water. I am surprised that was not mentioned. There are tons of pure sulfur balls on the shores of the Dead Sea in Israel. It floats.
A geologist's hammer equivalent tool might be faster, simpler, more robust than perseverance's abrading/core collecting tools. (maybe high-speed mode on one of the cameras to see what fragment came from where).
Good Morning, Great educational work you are dong. Sulfur or brimstone is fascinating. The way it is spread out tells a story in itself. They landscape tells the story. But what? Love your channel and the information you share. Keep doing what you are doing. Thank You.
So you visited the Taupo region of New Zealand. Certainly a very volcanic region and many interesting volcanic related areas to visit. I hope you enjoyed your stay. Kiwi David 🇳🇿
@@MarsGuy Really! You must have liked the unique features of the area then. Said to be the site of the worlds biggest volcanic eruption and recorded by the Chinese. I am sure you might liked to have gone to White Island, in the Bay of Plenty, to study Sulfur. But it's a very dangerous place (currently at alert Level 2) and the last sulfur mining plant in the 1980's was abandoned, after an eruption and all they found in body and alive, was a cat. The cat may have 9 lives, but over 30 people have lost theirs, on that active volcanic island. Best to send in the robots.
Could the sulfur be an artifact of the formation of the crater via impact? I expect that the crater would have been molten at some point during/after impact.
They're not even expensive either. Just a few billion each. We could have sent 80 rovers instead of funding the recent proxy wars. Or 40 rovers and 10 more james webb telescopes. If we count the war on terror too we could have had 2700 rovers or 1346 rovers and 350 james Webb telescopes. There would obviously be depreciating returns with that many but in a more ideal world we could have easily afforded to have a rover/satellite/probe on nearly every single planet and moon in our solar system.
00:39 Layers? You know what also has layers? Hint: those wise words are part of a philosophical exchange between a donkey an a Large (not little) Green Man.
When this news broke my first thought was "I can't wait for what Mar Guy will make of this!" And lo and behold, a fire and brimstone special episode! Thank you so much for this!
Good 😅
So glad to know that this is your go-to channel for Mars news! Glad I could deliver for you. And thanks much for showing your support and appreciation for this channel. Much appreciated.
@@MarsGuy If only we could scrape enough cash together to actually send you there...
@@Rxke If only indeed!
It's nice to hear from Curiosity. It doesn't get the attention like its newer brother/sister.
Right
I like the images from both rovers, which are both of overwhelming quality. The longvity of these rovers is astonishing, Curiosity already for 12 years and Perseverance for more than 3 years. I hope Perseverance will also be active for more than one decade.
Yea why is that?
Curiosity has been there for 12 years? God time flies. I didn’t realize there was such a big gap between the two though, now I’m wondering why they are so similar. I understand perseverance has some different things, but it’s not that much different. It’s not almost a decade worth of technology different.
I've been waiting for this post. Pure sulfur crystals are uncommon to the point I'm puzzled as to how they formed.
We need more Curiosity.
My assumption is that it formed near a volcanic vent, then travelled to it's current location via an asteroid impact at the volcano where it formed as part of the ejecta blanket.
Thanks. Very professional discussion. Rare on TH-cam.....
Thanks for the comment!
Hello Curiosity!!!! It's so good to see you here on this channel! Thank you, Mars Guy, for the update on Curiosity. As much as I love Perseverance, all our rovers need their time in the limelight. We mustn't forget any of them. All the hard work and information the rovers and their teams bring to us is invaluable. Mars Guy, you're the best!!
Glad to highlight the fun discoveries of Curiosity!
I've seen NASA report on the same thing, namely the discovery of pure sulfur on Mars by Curiosity. Well, to be frank, your report is much more informative, concise with better narration. I wish it would be longer. Thanks!
this channel is the best. I agree 200% with you Mars Guy doing a better job than NASA.
Thanks for the feedback. Glad to know people appreciate this content.
@@Rxke NASA explains all these things, it's just buried within hours long lectures, press releases and articles that few people digest.
@@twonumber22 I know - and I'm very grateful they put virtually everything online - I've been so giddy with the Bennu papers... But if one has a daytime job one does not always have the time to listen to hours long lectures or read papers. MarGuy is a bona fide geologist, doing a TLDR without dumbing things down too much. Or making it too 'entertaining'
@@Rxke Yeah nobody has time for it all but we definitely have time for Mars guy
If these are sedimentary beds, it would be even more interesting, as the pure sulphur in those deposits is thought to be derived from bacterial action on gypsum and anhydrite (both are calcium sulphates). There are deposits of that type in Texas.
True. I didn't want to introduce that concept because it seems too provocative at this point.
@@MarsGuy The presence of olivine nearby does support an igneous origin, somewhat eroded and reworked.
Been waiting for your take on this :) Thanks!
Great, thanks for watching!
MARS GUY MOVES!!!
Yes !! A Moving Mars Guy for Scale is a new experience !!
I think the previous episode was when he debuted an animated Mars Guy! 🤘
@@DUKE_of_RAMBLE - Thanks, I missed that one. Gonna see it, for the info and the debut of Moving Mars Guy.
@@tubularap Of course Mars Guy is now animated... He had to get from Perseverence to Curiosity. 😄
@@DUKE_of_RAMBLE his very first or so episode had him doing a complete episode like that, but IIRC it was waaaay too costly to continue in that style. Maybe now with more followers and income, short snippets have become affordable.
This might come in handy if future explorers find themselves confronted by The Gorn.
It is so exciting to see light and whitish rocks amidst so many dark and reddish ones. As soon as I saw the image elsewhere, I pined for it to be Sunday and Mars Guy's elucidation. Thank you.
Happy to elucidate! Thanks for watching.
Just fascinating! what a strange and diverse world Mars is, thanks for these clear, interesting and illuminating videos!
Glad you appreciate the wonders of Mars!
Brimstone areas on earth are smelling terribly like sulfur dioxide. Would this sulfur on mars smell at all without the presence of oxide? What a great video again. For me exactly the right balance between information and entertainment. Keep on going like this. You don't need millions of klicks, you are doing the best for us 36K subscribers with your high quality information! Thanx for all of that!
Raw sulfur smells like almost nothing, probably much the same there.
No oxygen, no sulphur dioxide, no smell...
Thanks @drguenther for being among the selective viewers! And it's actually H2S, hydrogen sulfide that has the rotten egg smell, which forms from volcanic emissions even without oxygen in the atmosphere.
Thank you. I have been looking at the raw images of MAHLI instrument and couldn't wrap my head around what I was seeing. Pure as a tear sulfur crystal. How is that possible? The hues and layers inside the fragments, pure joy for the eye. I need more of this. Let the Curiousity have the better of it and smack the next porous rock, in slow motion). I want to savour every millisecond). I want some UV light at night again, please). I know it's impossible but i also want the sun to illuminate it from behind, so that the sun rays would shine through. Thank you for the episode!
Great that you're really appreciating this. Thanks for the comment.
So that’s where Hell is….
Never seen any kind of giant crystals exposed on Mars, they practically drove over a geode. Some geologist was probably agog when they first saw it.
It may not bubble itself, but from liberating gas from the surface it flows over. You can see it by tossing molten aluminum on seeming dry concrete or lead on wood.
Can't rule out that possibility.
Thanks for putting together this excellent discussion on the background and importance of the surprising discovery of pure sulfur rocks by Curiosity in a short time. Your last comment about no chance of fire for this brimstone might be a clue to how this sulfur ended up in these rocks. The lack of oxygen in the atmosphere of Mars must affect the chemistry of some rocks at the surface.
Yes, very astute. We have a research question about the different processes that lead to sulfur with different oxidation states.
This is a very well done and concise series....and Mars Guy has a cool space ( Mars) suit..
Ha, glad you like my DIY effort! And thanks.
This is an amazing discovery!
I saw this on my news feed and thought can’t wait to see what Mars Guy got to say!
Great, hope you liked it!
04:19 Awesome imaging. I am in my armchair, yet a big budget, plus an excellence of engineering, plus an intellect in imaging (sorry, getting poetic here) have enabled me to see sulphur on Mars in such detail.
I am from New Zealand and appreciate the formations I have seen many times getting a mention.
All good then! Glad you appreciate the wonder of it all.
Thanks again MG, I really appreciate your content formulation and presentation style.
Glad you do, thanks.
It's very nice to see Mars Guy animated now :-) . By the way, the yellow coloring and sulfur vapor can also be seen on the Nea Kameni volcanic island, which lies in the Caldera in front of the famous Greek island of Santorini (Thira) in the Aegean Sea (I visited this in 2006).
Glad you like it. And yes, volcanoes commonly have fumarolic alteration producing yellow sulfur.
Great footage of those Sulphur producing fumaroles on Earth, and those beautiful Sulphur crystals in New Zealand.
Thanks, glad you liked that.
Great report. Thank you.
Thanks!
I had never heard of smektite, then within a few hours today I see 2 videos that talk about the type of clay. The other video was by Anton Petrov.
This may be outside of your expertise but as you mentioned the low oxygen on Mars I thought I'd ask!
Before the Oxidisation of the Earth's atmosphere how did lack of oxygen affect Volcanic Lava flows? I presume fire wasn't possible so did Lava react to the atmosphere the same way as it does to sea water in forming hard crust pillows or did the lack of oxygen have no effect and it flowed the same?
It was harder to oxidize iron in volcanic minerals on early Earth with its low oxygen, but other behavior of lava would've been mostly the same.
Fire and Brimstone. There was fire on Mars, and it must have been intense..
I was thinking that exactly.
Supervalcano from earth must've shot sulfur to Mars?
Sulfur is a versatile element that could be used in various ways by humans on Mars. Here are some potential applications:
1. Food production: Sulfur is an essential nutrient for plants, and Mars' soil lacks it. Adding sulfur to the Martian soil could help support plant growth, making it possible to grow food for human consumption.
2. Energy storage: Sulfur has the ability to store energy in the form of sulfuric acid, which could be used as a battery or fuel cell. This could provide a sustainable source of energy for Martian settlements.
3. Water purification: Sulfur can be used to remove impurities from water, making it safe for human consumption. This could be particularly useful on Mars, where water is scarce and purification is crucial.
4. Medical applications: Sulfur has antibacterial and antifungal properties, making it useful for treating infections and wounds. It could also be used to create medical supplies, such as bandages and dressings.
5. Construction materials: Sulfur can be used to create building materials, such as concrete and mortar, which could be used to construct habitats and infrastructure on Mars.
6. Propulsion: Sulfur can be used as a fuel additive to improve the efficiency of propulsion systems, such as rocket engines.
7. Radiation shielding: Sulfur has been shown to have radiation shielding properties, making it a potential material for protecting humans and equipment from harmful radiation on Mars.
8. Bioregenerative systems: Sulfur can be used to create bioregenerative systems, which could recycle air, water, and waste on Mars, making it possible for humans to live sustainably on the planet.
Some potential ways to obtain sulfur on Mars include:
1. Mining: Sulfur deposits could be mined from Martian rocks and soil.
2. Recycling: Sulfur could be recycled from waste materials, such as rocket fuel and other industrial processes.
3. In-situ resource utilization: Sulfur could be extracted from Martian rocks and soil using in-situ resource utilization (ISRU) techniques, which involve processing local resources to create the materials needed for human exploration and settlement.
Overall, sulfur is a versatile element that could play a crucial role in supporting human life on Mars.
Thanks for including a scale - most don’t and you’re left wondering just how big something is.
Yep, that's a key feature of this channel. Glad you appreciate it.
Quite astonishing!
When I was hearing articles talking about green crystals being found on Mars I didn’t even read them because I thought it was bs but dang that’s cool that Curisoity actually found green crystallized sulfur.
Thank you! More curiosity videos, please!
This likely is not the last...
Nice video bro.
Absolutely loved it.
👌
Great, thanks!
2:45 Those sulfur crystals sure look amazing. Also, Curiosity must weigh a lot to be able to crush that rock so nicely, but maybe the strength of the rock wasn't strong either, not bonded well.
Thanks for my Sunday fix on all things Mars! 👍💪✌
According to wikipedia, Curiosity weighs about 900 kg. Probably enough to crack a piece of sulfur
@@widmo206 Thanks for looking it up!
@@widmo206 Curiosity would only "weigh" about 350 kg on Mars.
@@tinkertailor7385 Right, forgot about the lower gravity
6 wheels to spread the load too if memory serves so notionally 60kg per wheel.
That said the wheels are metal so the point loading as they roll over is presumably immense.
I always love the "meanwhile...." episodes. Thank you.
Ha, glad you do!
Geology field trip I burned my fingers looking for sulfur crystals on small cliff. The low 5 foot face had steam vents that created small crystal complexes. We were at China Lake Naval Weapons Testing center. (With permission). It was a small competition to find a good one. I tapped the face with my hand pick and unexpectedly opened a steam vent right at the handle. Ouch. Bummer. Not a major burn. Just a hurting for a while.
I'm glad you're sharing some stuff from Curiosity. It's an amazing mission too.
Yeah, couldn't pass up reporting on this amazing discovery.
Thanks Mars Guy! What a wild find for Martian geology. 👍
Agreed!
Great explanation. Thanks, Mars Guy!
Thanks again!
Was waiting for this video, too. Great new discovery! Still don't understand how MG has only 36K subs? I hope ALL of you watching are subscribed!! Share this dedicated creator, folks!
Glad you're one of the 36K subscribers. Happy to have appreciative viewers.
Mars' fiery red glow
Brimstone's burning, witches' spell
Dark magic takes hold
Always look forward to these vids....many thanks, I'll spare you any home spun theories...!
Always fun to learn what others think!
A lucky accident - the rover crushing a rock - leads to the discovery of pure sulfur rocks in a non-volcanic area, where they shouldn't even be. Interesting!
Thanks MG and Curiosity for showing us the way. One wonders if it could catch fire it is sulfur.
There's just not enough oxygen in the Martian atmosphere to burn sulfur.
Martian eggs
Easter eggs 😀
This is one of the reasons that we need human scientists on that planet, because a lot more is hidden underneath all that orange dust that covers everything.
I'm NO expert, but that site on Mars looked to me like an impact site, compete with the risen middle portion (Mt Sharp). One only has to look towards the Moon for similar structures. _(at least that's what it immediately reminded me of)_
So could it be that the site had indeed been hit, where a subsurface sulfur deposit had been liquefied, which then flowed over a vent of sublimating CO2 and that's what created the "air pockets" in the cooled sulfur?
Yes, it's thought that part of the "mound" in Gale crater (Mt. Sharp), could be an impact-related central peak.
I was hoping you would cover this!!!
Hope you liked it!
So-------
Did Curiosity blame Percy for the smell?
Rite Mars Dude, Glad you kept your helmet on for this episode! If you hadn't mentioned @ 2:46 that this was sulfur crystals I'd have thought it was a plant! TFS, GB :)
Ha, it does look a bit biological!
Thank youuuu for your video of the history of this world or some of it 💕 it was really interesting to watch it and see how much it has changed since then ❤️ thank youuuu and thank youuuu
Thanks youuuu for watching!
Doom Theory looking good.
Sudbury crater on earth generated sulfide melts, which are still mined for Cu and Ni today.
Perhaps this sulfur is a remnant of the gale crater impact event, instead of volcanic activity.
Yeah, that's what I was thinking. Was water flowing on Mars when the Crater formed? That's a big Crater, lots of residual heat would create hot springs.
Sulfur Nevada, you can find nice sulfur crystals formed by hot ground water springs long ago.
@@DigDougDig Well in the case of Sudbury, it was literal sulfide melt, not hotsprings.
Sulfides are of course no elemental S, so I put no weigh behind this hypothesis. Although it could probably be enough that molten rock that filled the crater after the impact degassed sulphur like a regular basaltic lava flow would.
Larger sulphur deposits are also found near volcanic lakes. So deposition in a water filled crater lake can also be an option.
No fire and brimstone on Mars? The hell you say?
Thanks for another excellent update Mars Guy. You... eh, hem... rock!
Thanks for the puns!
I was right! Crushing rocks was major bonus science!
Go Curiosity!
If it is truly not a volcano and just setamentary rock, You have your answer. Elamental sulfur has a density of 2.07 g/cc. resting a fair distance between
1.873 g/cc Cesium Cs 55
2.07 g/cc Sulfur S
16 2.26 g/cc Carbon C 6
I would stand to reason that it settaled out all into one location after whatever event brought it to the crater from upstream.
I know, it's pareidolia, but at 0:58, we can clearly see a martian kangaroo.
Conspiracy subreddit two weeks from now: "WHAT ARE THEY TRYING TO HIDE?!?!"
Pretty cool, thanks for sharing that. Charles
Thanks as always for watching.
The discovery of free sulfur, in larger quantities, on Mars, is very interesting. Sulfur forms the basis for one of the strongest concrete types "Sulfur concrete" that can easily be used for 3D printing of buildings on Mars.
Would the lower air density help allow the formation of bubbles?
I am sure you would of mentioned that if it was true
Anytime new evidence shows greater complexity just makes me excited
Good point, one I pondered myself. I don't have the answer though.
Brimstone? We must be getting close.
It floats and could have been deposited by ancient water. I am surprised that was not mentioned. There are tons of pure sulfur balls on the shores of the Dead Sea in Israel. It floats.
Hm, very interesting. Hadn't heard of this before. Will dig into the literature.
"rocks made of pure sulphur" so just sulphur then.
Distinct from sulfates or sulfides.
Form a gem/space nerd, I really enjoyed your video.
Happy to have such nerds watching!
A geologist's hammer equivalent tool might be faster, simpler, more robust than perseverance's abrading/core collecting tools.
(maybe high-speed mode on one of the cameras to see what fragment came from where).
Nice Travolta move 😅
forget Asimov. first law of robotics: keep your solar panels clean!
You continue to make me fascinated with rocks much more than I ever thought possible. This is an amazing discovery!
So glad to know! Rocks can indeed tell fascinating stories.
Isn't sulfur a component of gunpowder ? I'm just thinking of the original star trek episode with the Gorn
Ha, I know that episode too! Must be true then.
Ok Mars has Sulfides and Iron and ancient rivers!
Does it have Quarz veins? Gold?
Mars geology is very interesting.
Glad you're interested!
The sulphur could have come from an asteroid impact.
Good Morning, Great educational work you are dong. Sulfur or brimstone is fascinating. The way it is spread out tells a story in itself. They landscape tells the story. But what? Love your channel and the information you share. Keep doing what you are doing. Thank You.
Thanks for the feedback. Glad you appreciate this content. And yes, what is this stuff telling us?
Like the good old Mr. Spock used to say: "Fascinating!"
With a raised eyebrow!
@@MarsGuy 😂
Thank You Mars Guy! News from other side of the Mars are always welcome!
Great, glad you think so!
There must be some intense volcanic activity happening even when Mars atmosphere thinned considerably compared to in the past
Great to hear from Curiosity Again, Still Knocking Out the Science Data, the old timer Still Swinging the 🪨🔨😉
True!
So you visited the Taupo region of New Zealand. Certainly a very volcanic region and many interesting volcanic related areas to visit. I hope you enjoyed your stay. Kiwi David 🇳🇿
Yep, been there twice!
@@MarsGuy Really! You must have liked the unique features of the area then. Said to be the site of the worlds biggest volcanic eruption and recorded by the Chinese.
I am sure you might liked to have gone to White Island, in the Bay of Plenty, to study Sulfur. But it's a very dangerous place (currently at alert Level 2) and the last sulfur mining plant in the 1980's was abandoned, after an eruption and all they found in body and alive, was a cat.
The cat may have 9 lives, but over 30 people have lost theirs, on that active volcanic island. Best to send in the robots.
Very interesting as always MG, thx j-M ⛏️👍🇬🇧😎
Thanks 👍
Wow. Great to see❤
Mars guy takes off helmet and smells rotten eggs
Ha ha! Only if there's hydrogen sulfide (H2S) gas.
I wonder if these sulfur rocks could be the result of being scattered by a meteorite impact?
That's one of many possibilities.
so does that imply therese rocks were never in contact with water?
3:25 could it be that there was some gas bubbling through the molten sulfur as it cooled?
Maybe...?
Could the sulfur be an artifact of the formation of the crater via impact? I expect that the crater would have been molten at some point during/after impact.
Maybe...?
1:55 "Robinson Crusoe On Mars (1964)" - vibes anyone?
Yet another stellar Mars Guy video! Thank you so much!!🎉
Thanks again!
With sulphur and perchlorates on Mars, you have the beginnings of a flashpowder industry :)
Good work 👏💯💯🎉
Thanks 💯
Does the Rover have the ability to pick up samples outside of the Core Borer?
I'm not sure what do you mean, but Curiosity has a spectrometer it can use to analyze rock dust produced by a drill
@@widmo206 Can it pick up rocks like this Sulphur Crystal outside of the Core Boring apparatus?
*for return to earth
@@S-T-E-V-E Oh, no. It wasn't designed to get the samples back. That's what Perseverance is for
that's really cool
Thanks!
I'm really happy to have repeat supporters of this channel. It's direct feedback about the value of this content. Thanks!
Sulphides next 😃
They need about five more Rovers exploring at the same time.
They're not even expensive either. Just a few billion each. We could have sent 80 rovers instead of funding the recent proxy wars.
Or 40 rovers and 10 more james webb telescopes.
If we count the war on terror too we could have had 2700 rovers or 1346 rovers and 350 james Webb telescopes.
There would obviously be depreciating returns with that many but in a more ideal world we could have easily afforded to have a rover/satellite/probe on nearly every single planet and moon in our solar system.
00:39 Layers? You know what also has layers?
Hint: those wise words are part of a philosophical exchange between a donkey an a Large (not little) Green Man.
Onions. You peel them and they make you cry.
@@davidwuhrer6704 Aha, David, a man of culture!
That is really cool.
There is also a Doom-joke hidden here somewhere.
what an incredible zoom in to start the video. mind blowing.
Glad you liked it
Definitely a portal to Hell. Call Doomguy.
Good at least I know I can make gunpowder on Mars