Skip to main content

Spiders on Mars? Citizen scientists help NASA spot the strange formations

NASA has been searching for spiders on Mars since they were first spotted a few years ago. It was a daunting task. The team behind the Mars Reconnaissance Obiter had too many images to analyze without a little help. So they asked citizen scientists to offer a hand.

Martian spiders aren’t creatures, they’re features that are carved into the landscape by seasonal slabs of dry ice. When winter falls upon the Red Planet’s south pole, some of the carbon dioxide in the atmosphere condenses and forms polar ice caps. As spring returns, these caps thaw from the bottom up, the solid ice evaporates directly into a gas, and the process cuts “araneiform” (spider-like) channels into the landscape.

Recommended Videos

This geological process can’t be found on Earth so observing these features is of particular interest to scientists. Through the Planet Four: Terrains platform they asked volunteers to scan and classify images from the orbiter’s Context Camera (CTX) and High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment (HiRISE) to identify some of these unique formations. A year later, nearly 8,500 registered volunteers have helped scientists target specific regions for further imaging.

“It’s heartwarming to see so many citizens of planet Earth donate their time to help study Mars,” HiRISE Deputy Principal Investigator Candice Hansen said in a press release. “Thanks to the discovery power of so many people, we’re using HiRISE to take images of places we might not have studied without this assistance.”

The volunteers’s observations have helped identify 20 new regions for HiRISE’s seasonal monitoring of Mars.

But the hunt for spiders and other unique formations has just begun. With a fresh batch of CTX images recently added to the Planet Four: Terrain database, NASA welcomes any keen-eyed citizen scientists to join in the exploration and help unlock the geological secrets of the red planet.

Dyllan Furness
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Dyllan Furness is a freelance writer from Florida. He covers strange science and emerging tech for Digital Trends, focusing…
NASA’s Ingenuity helicopter travels 160 meters in 8th Mars flight
NASA's Ingenuity helicopter.

NASA’s Mars helicopter, Ingenuity, has completed its eighth flight over the Martian surface as the team continues to explore how the aircraft can assist future space missions.

“Another successful flight for Ingenuity!” the team at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL), which is overseeing the current Mars mission, said in a tweet on Tuesday. The message also included an image of the helicopter’s shadow as it passed over the ground during its flight earlier this week.

Read more
NASA’s Mars helicopter wins prestigious space exploration award
NASA's Ingenuity helicopter.

The team behind NASA’s Mars helicopter, Ingenuity, has won this year’s John L. “Jack” Swigert Jr. Award for Space Exploration from the Space Foundation. The prestigious annual prize recognizes extraordinary accomplishments in the realm of space exploration and discovery.

The Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL), which is conducting NASA's current Mars mission, announced the news in a tweet on Tuesday, June 15.

Read more
The sound of science: Why audio is the next frontier in Mars exploration
mars 2020 perseverance rover

You've seen the photos of Mars from the surface: The red-tinted dust, the sharp mountains, the desolate rock formations. For as long as we've had rovers on the red planet, since Viking 1 rolled onto martian soil in the 1970s, we've been fascinated by imagery of this alien world.

But now there's a new way for us to experience Mars from here on Earth, and that's by listening to it. Since its arrival on Mars in February 2021, NASA's Perseverance rover has recorded sounds of itself in action and, last month, it was able to record audio of the Ingenuity helicopter in flight for the first time.

Read more