NASA’s Perseverance rover used ground-penetrating radar to uncover evidence of a 4.2-billion-year-old river delta buried deep beneath Jezero Crater, extending Mars’ window of potential habitability by over 500 million years and revealing a geological archive far more pristine than anything on Earth.
The Mars rover Perseverance has made a landmark discovery that fundamentally reshapes our understanding of the Red Planet’s watery past. Using its ground-penetrating radar, the rover detected clear signatures of an ancient river delta buried more than 35 meters below the surface of Jezero Crater. This subsurface feature dates back approximately 4.2 billion years, significantly older than the exposed fluvial structures previously studied on the crater floor, which formed around 3.7 billion years ago. The findings, published in the journal Science Advances, indicate that Mars hosted sustained liquid water for a much longer period than previously believed, potentially expanding the era during which the planet could have supported microbial life.
The discovery emerged from 78 traverses conducted by Perseverance between September 2023 and February 2024, as part of its ongoing exploration of Jezero Crater—a site chosen specifically for its abundant water-altered minerals and ancient deltaic deposits visible from orbit. The radar echoes revealed layered sediments and sinuous channels characteristic of river-carved landscapes, but these features lie beneath layers of younger material, effectively preserving them from the geological degradation that has altered similar-aged rocks on Earth.
This layered sedimentary record is remarkably intact because Mars lacks the active plate tectonics, erosion, and biological processes that constantly recycle Earth’s crust. As lead author Emily Cardarelli of UCLA notes, “On Earth those conditions produce minerals that can preserve fossils,” and the Martian preservation could be even more pristine. The Jezero Crater itself is the remnant of a massive asteroid impact that occurred nearly four billion years ago, an event that helped shape the crater’s initial basin and later collected water to form the lake and river systems.
Extending the Habitability Window
Prior to this discovery, the oldest confirmed fluvial activity on Mars was dated to about 3.7 billion years ago, based on surface deltaic deposits that Perseverance has been studying. The new radar evidence pushes the start of sustained river activity back by at least 500 million years, to the very early Noachian period. This suggests that Mars not only had a thicker atmosphere and warmer climate capable of supporting liquid water but maintained these conditions for a far longer duration. Multiple wet epochs—separated by drier periods—likely occurred within Jezero Crater, each presenting a potential niche for microbial life to emerge and persist.
A Geological Archive Superior to Earth’s
One of the most profound implications of this find is that Mars offers a geological record that is far less altered than anything on Earth. Rocks from the early Noachian on Earth have been profoundly modified by billions of years of tectonic activity, volcanic processes, and weathering. “They’ve been heated, they’ve been squished, and they’ve been altered by water,” Cardarelli explains. “They’ve had a rough time.” In contrast, the Martian subsurface has remained largely frozen and static, potentially preserving organic molecules or biosignatures in their original context. This makes Mars an unparalleled natural laboratory for studying the conditions that give rise to life, with direct relevance to Earth’s own origins.
Implications for the Search for Extraterrestrial Life
The extended timeline of water activity, combined with the crater’s history as an impact site, strengthens the case for Jezero as a prime target in the search for past life. The Perseverance mission is already caching rock samples that could one day be returned to Earth for detailed analysis. Moreover, the sheer age of these buried systems raises tantalizing questions about panspermia—the hypothesis that life could have traveled between planets on meteorites. Some researchers speculate that asteroid impacts on early Mars might have ejected microbial life into space, with some fragments potentially landing on Earth. This scenario gains plausibility from evidence that Mars was habitable far earlier than previously thought.
What’s Next for Perseverance and Jezero
Emily Cardarelli emphasizes that this is only the beginning: “There’s a lot more to say about this particular area—and other areas within the crater,” she says. “We’re still digesting all our data.” The rover continues its mission, and future radar traverses may reveal additional buried structures or refine the timeline of aqueous activity. Each new layer of data brings scientists closer to answering the fundamental question: Did life ever arise on Mars? With its exceptionally preserved record, Jezero Crater may hold the clearest window yet into a time when the Red Planet was a wet, potentially habitable world.
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