Seven weeks after touching down, Curiosity used its hammering drill to bore a 2.5 inch hole into the “John Klein outcrop,” making it the first time any rover had ever drilled into a rock on another planet.
Key chemical ingredients needed for life were found in the gray powder Curiosity drilled out of the John Klein outcrop, including sulfur, nitrogen, hydrogen, oxygen, phosphorus and carbon. The fine-grained rock also contained clay minerals, suggesting a long-ago aqueous environment, perhaps a lake.
With this evidence in hand, the Curiosity team announced in early March that the Rover’s landing site could have supported microbial life billions of years ago.


Seven weeks after touching down, Curiosity used its hammering drill to bore a 2.5 inch hole into the “John Klein outcrop,” making it the first time any rover had ever drilled into a rock on another planet.
Key chemical ingredients needed for life were found in the gray powder Curiosity drilled out of the John Klein outcrop, including sulfur, nitrogen, hydrogen, oxygen, phosphorus and carbon. The fine-grained rock also contained clay minerals, suggesting a long-ago aqueous environment, perhaps a lake.
With this evidence in hand, the Curiosity team announced in early March that the Rover’s landing site could have supported microbial life billions of years ago.