Curiosity rover finds clues to Mars’ watery past in rocky ‘spider webs’


NASA’s Curiosity rover has captured close-up images of sprawling, web-like rock formations on Mars that look like giant spider webs from orbit and could provide new clues about the Red Planet’s watery past.

The intricate formations are part of a boxwork area – network of low ridges about 1 to 2 meters high with sand pits between them – which Curiosity have been exploring for months on the slopes of Mount Sharp inside Gale Crater. The rover took panoramic images of the area with Mastcam on September 26, 2025, giving scientists an unprecedented look at the planet’s unusual terrain, according to a statement from NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL).

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