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NASA's Mars rover has suffered "abuse" while it has been roaming the red planet, according to the space agency.
The Curiosity Rover has been exploring Mars since 2012, sending back crucial information about the planet as it rolls around the rocky terrain near the Gale Crater where it landed.
Sharing a picture of one of the Curiosity rover's battered wheels, Ashley Stroupe, a mission operations engineer at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, said the rover "is still holding up well despite taking some of the worst abuse from Mars".
Two images were released of the wheel which were taken by the rover's "hand lens imager" which sits at the end of its robotic arm.
The rover has six wheels and the images were taken of its right-middle wheel.
The images were part of NASA's "periodic check-in on our wheels to see how they are holding up on the rough terrain", according to Ms Stroupe in the blog post.
A few weeks earlier, the Curiosity Rover captured a photo of Earth with one of Mars's moons for the first time.
"POV: You're on Mars, looking up at the night sky and you notice…," posted the team behind the Rover on X.
"That's Phobos, one of Mars' two moons - and the tiny evening "star" to its right is Earth!"
The rover has covered 20 miles on the planet and is currently in an area called the Gedis Vallis.
Its mission objective is to "determine if Mars was ever able to support microbial life", which would give scientists clues as to whether life could now be supported on the planet.
Last weekend it completed a "highly anticipated examination" of white stones in the Sheep Creek, also investigating Cloud Canyon, Moonlight Lake, and Angora Mountain.
Those place names "sound so lovely and soft, and are quite evocative of these pale stones, which stand out so much against the background", said Alex Innanen, an atmospheric scientist at York University who wrote the latest Curiosity blog post.
The team operating the rover are trying to discover if the rocks contain sulphur, like another sulphuric rock pile that was accidentally discovered earlier this year when the rover cracked it open with its wheels.
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Mars plays a big role in plans for humanity.
Space and tech billionaire Elon Musk says he plans to have a self-sustaining human colony on Mars in the next two decades, and will try and blast off five Starship spaceships to the planet in the next two years.
If those launches go well, he's aiming for humans to be sent up to Mars by 2028.
"Eventually," he said in a recent X post about the missions, "there will be thousands of Starships going to Mars and it will [be] a glorious sight to see!"
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