大象传媒

Face of a bear found on the surface of Mars

A crater resembling the face of a bear on Mars.Image source, NASA

The face of a bear has been found in the most unusual of places - the surface of Mars.

Astronomers from the University of Arizona found the strange structure using high resolution cameras onboard a Nasa spacecraft, orbiting above the red planet.

Two craters, likely to be from asteroids that have impacted the surface, have made the bear's eyes. While a sloping - possibly volcanic - collapsed hill is its snout.

A round pattern is the shape of the bear's head, which researchers say could be the outline of an area where dust has covered and settled over another larger crater.

Other strange things found on Mars

Image source, @NASAPersevere/Twitter
Image caption,

The rover took this picture of the shiny piece of thermal blanket which was a part of its landing gear

It's not the first unusual discovery on the Martian surface.

Last summer, Nasa's Mars rover, Perseverance, found a strange shiny silver object amongst the rocks.

However, it wasn't an alien discovery. On closer inspection it turned out to be a piece of litter...from the rover itself!

Media caption,

Perseverance: Nasa's rover will begin the search for signs of life on Mars

Did you know?

The largest volcano on Mars, called Olympus Mons, is also the solar system's tallest mountain!

Image source, NASA/JPL-Caltech/MSSS
Image caption,

Check out these before and after shots of the Christmas Eve Martian meteorite strike

Asteroids just like the one that helped carve out the 'bear's face' on Mars crash into the red planet all the time.

Meteorite strikes are so common that there are more than 200 impacts on the Martian surface during each Earth year.

One meteor the size of a VAN smashed into the planet's surface on Christmas Eve 2021. The impact unearthed loads of ice beneath the surface of the planet.

How long is a year on Mars?

Mars is a little slower, and further from the Sun than the Earth, so a full year for the red planet takes 687 Earth days.

Why do we see faces in things?

Image source, Getty Images
Image caption,

What a cheesy smile this grate face is wearing

It's not unusual for human brains to see human faces in objects and places where there are none.

It's something known as face pareidolia (you say it like this: 'pa-ray-doy-lee-ah'), which is when the brain tries to make sense of things.

The brain recognises something as a possible face in a few milliseconds and it comes from our development as babies identifying faces and emotions.