, one of many pieces of Mars that have landed on the Earth. Visible are its two sides and its inner surfaces after breaking it in 1998. It has for some time been accepted by the scientific community that a group of
meteorites came from Mars. As such, they represent actual samples of the planet and have been analyzed on Earth by the best equipment available. In these meteorites, called
SNCs, many important elements have been detected.
Magnesium,
aluminium,
titanium, iron, and chromium are relatively common in them. In addition,
lithium,
cobalt, nickel, copper, zinc, niobium,
molybdenum, lanthanum, europium, tungsten, and gold have been found in trace amounts. It is quite possible that in some places these materials may be concentrated enough to be mined economically. The Mars landers
Viking I,
Viking II,
Pathfinder,
Opportunity rover, and
Spirit rover identified aluminium, iron,
magnesium, and titanium in the Martian soil.
Opportunity found small structures, named "blueberries" which were found to be rich in
hematite, a major ore of iron. These blueberries could easily be gathered up and reduced to metallic iron that could be used to make steel. In addition, both
Spirit and
Opportunity rovers found nickel-iron
meteorites sitting on the surface of Mars. These could also be used to produce
steel. In December 2011,
Opportunity rover discovered a vein of
gypsum sticking out of the soil. Tests confirmed that it contained calcium, sulfur, and water. The mineral gypsum is the best match for the data. It likely formed from mineral-rich water moving through a crack in the rock. The vein, called "Homestake," is in Mars' Meridiani plain. Homestake is in a zone where the sulfate-rich sedimentary bedrock of the plains meets older, volcanic bedrock exposed at the rim of
Endeavour crater. Image:PIA07269-Mars Rover Opportunity-Iron Meteorite.jpg|
Heat Shield Rock was the first meteorite ever identified on another planet. It is 93% iron. is taking its Alpha Proton X-ray Spectrometer measurement of the
Yogi Rock (NASA). This instrument measured the elements in the rock. Image:Mars Viking 22e169.png|Viking lander took this picture of the Martian surface and analyzed the soil. Dark sand dunes are common on the surface of Mars. Their dark tone is due to the volcanic rock called basalt. The basalt dunes are believed to contain the minerals
chromite,
magnetite, and
ilmenite. Since the wind has gathered them together, they do not even have to be mined, merely scooped up. These minerals could supply future colonists with chromium, iron, and titanium. Image:Dark dunes in Noachis.JPG|Dark dunes (probably
basalt) which form a dark spot in
Noachis quadrangle. Picture from Mars Global Surveyor. Image: Dunes Wide View.jpg|Wide view of dunes in Noachis, as seen by
HiRISE Image: Close-up view of Dunes.jpg|Close-up View of dunes in the previous image, as seen by HiRISE. Note how sand barely covers some boulders. ==Future detection for ores on Mars==