News

Li-S Energy has produced Australia’s first lithium metal foils at its cell production facility in Victoria, a milestone the company says supports its broader mission to commercialise high-performance ...
This time, it has come through an unintentional clash between the Curiosity Rover and a Martian rock in the Gediz Vallis ...
A rock on Mars spilled a surprising yellow treasure after Curiosity accidentally cracked through its unremarkable exterior.
The crystals are made of pure elemental sulfur, something that has never been seen on the Red Planet before. The odd rock is one of a handful discovered on Mars in just the past year.
Science instruments on the rover confirmed the stone was pure sulfur — something no mission has seen before on Mars.
The rover's latest discoveries, including pure sulfur stones and sprawling mineral "spiderwebs," unravel new mysteries of Mars' watery past.
When pure sulfur is made naturally on Earth, the element is usually associated with superheated volcanic gasses and hot springs.
The Curiosity rover, which has been climbing a mountain of layered rock, literally stumbled upon pure sulfur, its wheels crushing the material to expose a bed of yellow crystals.
Previously, the rover uncovered minerals mixed with sulfur. But this is the first time pure sulfur has been discovered on Mars.
The rover’s wheel cracked open a rock and revealed pure elemental sulfur, which researchers have never seen on the Red Planet before ...