NASA tests new rover in Death Valley

NASA tests new rover in Death Valley

NASA'S test rover, 'Scarecrow'

The Mars rover (named Curiosity) is still en route to Mars and won’t get there until August, but NASA wants to be prepared for that moment.  So, it’s been holding training exercises in one the environments which closely resembles the red planet; Dumont Dunes in Death Valley.

Because it doesn’t have the ‘brain’ that the real rover has, the test rover has been called ‘Scarecrow’, referring to the character from The Wizard of Oz, who wanted so much to have a brain.  Scarecrow only weighs about 750 pounds, far less then the 2,000 pound behemoth which will be landing on Mars.

The real rover will be brought down by a sky crane, a sort of hovering rocketship, and the rover will be exploring an area called Gale Crater, from which the 3-mile high Mt. Sharp rises from the middle.  Its main mission will to be to examine the layers of Mt. Sharp and also determine if Gale Crater was ever able to support microbial life.  It is reported that the real rover has 10 instruments to help it identify organic material, even a laser that will used on rocks.

This scenario reminds us of the Desert Dogs last trip to Beveridge City, where we witnessed an UNIDENTIFIED Flying Object.  One of the possibilities we discussed was a rover.  The hovering and erratic flying we witnessed could be explained by the sky crane, and the much closer to the ground strafing and light show could be a test rover using its test laser.  Again, we don’t know what we saw, but parts of this story definitely reminded us of what we saw!

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Cyclist disappears in Death Valley

George Kohler of San Francisco was participating in a 318-mile cycling tour of Death Valley.  He had only gone 52 miles when he mysteriously disappeared about a week ago on March 12.  It was the first day of the tour.
Kohler and other cyclists were camped near Mesquite Springs and at about 8 p.m. he said [...]

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Ubehebe To Erupt?

Ubehebe Crater, Death Valley–Photo Richard Elliott

A new study of Death Valley’s Ubehebe (You-bee Hee-bee) Crater presents two bold conclusions.  The first deduction places the crater’s age between 800-1,200 years old.  Traditionally accepted estimates placed the crater around 2,000 to 6,000 years old.  The second resolution claims that with this younger geological date, Ubehebe may possibly explode again, with the proper [...]

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