As part of its investigation of "Victoria Crater," NASA's Mars Exploration
Rover Opportunity examined a promontory called "Cape St. Mary" from the
from the vantage point of "Cape Verde," the next promontory
counterclockwise around the crater's deeply scalloped rim. This view of
Cape St. Mary combines several exposures taken by the rover's panoramic
camera into an approximately true-color mosaic.
The upper portion of the crater wall contains a jumble of material tossed
outward by the impact that excavated the crater. This vertical
cross-section through the blanket of ejected material surrounding the
crater was exposed by erosion that expanded the crater outward from its
original diameter, according to scientists' interpretation of the
observations. Below the jumbled material in the upper part of the wall
are layers that survive relatively intact from before the crater-causing
impact. Near the base of the Cape St. Mary cliff are layers with a pattern
called "crossbedding," intersecting with each other at angles, rather than
parallel to each other. Large-scale crossbedding can result from material
being deposited as wind-blown dunes.
The images combined into this mosaic were taken during the 970th Martian
day, or sol, of Opportunity's Mars-surface mission (Oct. 16, 2006). The
panoramic camera took them through the camera's 750-nanometer,
530-nanometer and 430-nanometer filters.