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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsGiant 'spiderwebs' on Mars contain tiny egg-like structures that scientists 'can't quite explain,' new photos reveal
NASA's Curiosity rover has snapped stunning new photos of giant "spiderwebs" zig-zagging across the surface of Mars. One of these images has revealed never-before-seen, egg-like spheroids covering the sprawling structures and scientists are struggling to explain them.
Over the last 8 months, Curiosity has been closely examining a series of interconnected rocky ridges, dubbed "boxwork," on the slopes of Mount Sharp, in the Gale Crater. These ridges, which cover an area up to 12 miles (20 kilometers) across, were created billions of yars ago as ancient Martian groundwater seeped beneath the planet's surface. They were first spotted by orbital spacecraft in 2006, but they have remained largely unexplored until now.
The web-like structures should not be confused with the infamous "spiders on Mars" a series of geological features that are created when carbon dioxide ice sublimates beneath the Red Planet's surface and look like swarming arachnids when viewed from above. (These faux spiders were also recently recreated on Earth, while a similar "wall demon" was also spotted on Jupiter's moon Europa.)
NASA released Curiosity's first boxwork photos in June 2025, shortly after reaching the rocky ridges. But on Monday (Feb. 23), the agency released two more snaps, which showed the structures in much greater detail.
https://www.yahoo.com/news/articles/giant-spiderwebs-mars-contain-tiny-160535292.html
Didn't David Bowie sing about the "Spiders from Mars"?
Chasstev365
(7,514 posts)WestMichRad
(3,137 posts)
was his bands name, when he was in his Ziggy Stardust persona.
Cool stuff! Wonder what those egg-shaped things are? Actuall eggs?
2naSalit
(101,697 posts)Are they little things or are they large enough that human sized creatures could inhabit them?
haele
(15,279 posts)Look up the sailing stones of the Racetrack Playa in Death Valley. That's the first thing that comes to mind about this article.
They tend to be smooth and spherical, also.
cbabe
(6,522 posts)chouchou
(3,035 posts)Take it from us Monster Spiders, we'll gladly change from what we have now...
Emrys
(9,018 posts)Similar nodules are formed on Earth from metallic salts. Here's a manganese nodule, for instance:
![]()
(Its resemblance to a truffle is mere coincidence.)
Another non-organic possibility is a concretion effect, and either possibility might be more evidence of plentiful water on Mars in the past.
This is where a sense of scale would come in handy.
Concretions in Torysh, Western Kazakhstan
On the other hand, given the historical existence of water on Mars, they could be evidence of ancient lifeforms, maybe fossilized caviar from the now-extinct (?) Martian Lumpfish.
eppur_se_muova
(41,579 posts)There are many links to this news online, but they all seem to rehash the JPL press release.
They do identify the ridges as being 2-3 meters tall, in some articles. I guess the nodules are smaller than that. Apparently, nodules have been found previously on Mars so they're "old news", thus less deserving of details.
PS: "Truffle" was not the thing that first leapt to mind.
Kingofalldems
(40,127 posts)
?resize=678%2C500edbermac
(16,427 posts)But its aliens.

Enter stage left
(4,470 posts)As wonderful as his music and acting was in the show, I can almost believe he might have been from Mars!