Yogi Rock

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Mars Pathfinder rover Sojourner approaching Yogi Rock (circled)
Enlarge
Mars Pathfinder rover Sojourner approaching Yogi Rock (circled)
Sojourner at Yogi Rock (color)
Enlarge
Sojourner at Yogi Rock (color)

Yogi Rock is a rock on Mars that was discovered during the Mars Pathfinder mission in 1997, and named by Geoffrey A. Landis. The rocks found on the mission were named after famous icons and figures, and Yogi Rock was thought to resemble the head of a bear looking away from the spacecraft. It was, appropriately, then named for the famed cartoon character Yogi Bear.

The rock was the first on Mars found to be made of basalt, which suggests previous volcanic activity in the region as basalt is an igneous rock. The smoothness of the surface also suggested the past existence of water in the region. Yogi was also the first large rock reached by the Sojourner rover and was analyzed by an X-ray spectrometer to determine its composition. In a notable coincidence, the rock under the Yogi Berra stadium also turned out to be basalt.

Images of Sojouner approaching Yogi used in the opening credits of Star Trek: Enterprise made that television program the first science fiction television or film production in history to use footage (see color image above) taken on another planet.

[edit] See Also

[edit] External links

In other languages