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The rover is currently stationed near the junction between the “Glen Torridon” unit and the “Greenheugh” pediment, with its arm at a mission-record setting tilt of 26.9°. This weekend, the team plans to use the rover’s arm and remote sensing instruments to explore the textures and chemistry of rocks in this area.

On day one of this weekend’s plan, ChemCam will be used to gather chemical information from a bedrock target called “Garron Point,” which is filled with nodules. Additionally, a dark float rock that may have originated from the Greenheugh pediment, named “Mull of Galloway,” will also be investigated. The team plans to use DRT and collect APXS, MAHLI, and ChemCam observations of “Berwickshire,” a standard piece of bedrock in the area. APXS and MAHLI will also focus on “Cairnbulg,” a location with nodules, while MAHLI captures images of a vein known as “Ross and Cromarty.”

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