In 2004, NASA's Opportunity rover discovered thousands of gray, iron-rich spheres on Mars, nicknamed "blueberries." These 4-mm-wide balls littered rocks near the landing site, puzzling scientists until the rover found a depression—dubbed the "Berry Bowl"—packed with the spheres, captured on the 48th Martian day of the mission.
Opportunity's images showed the "blueberries" embedded in rock formations, distinct from the surrounding terrain. Analyzing a circular patch on the rock face left of the densest sphere cluster, the rover revealed a key clue: subsurface rock layers had different compositions than the hematite-rich spheres. This hinted at a watery origin, as hematite often forms in standing water.
The "Berry Bowl" itself was a shallow indentation where spheres seemed to have rolled or settled, suggesting they weren't part of the original rock but formed later. Their uniform size and spherical shape—unlike typical impact or volcanic formations—added to the mystery.
Subsequent analysis confirmed the leading theory: the "blueberries" formed through sedimentation in stagnant, iron-laden water. As water percolated through Martian soil, it dissolved iron minerals, which then precipitated into spherical crystals as the water evaporated or became supersaturated. This process, similar to Earth's iron oxide nodules, requires slow water movement—evidence that Mars once had standing water.
"The blueberries are geological fingerprints of Mars' wet history," said Dr. Steve Squyres, principal investigator for the Mars Exploration Rovers. "Their formation tells us that water once lingered long enough to create these structures, a critical clue for habitability."
Today, the "blueberries" remain iconic symbols of Mars' aqueous past, inspiring future missions to search for signs of ancient life in similar sedimentary deposits.