is collecting artifacts.
Without the large, powerful camera aboard , which observes Martian terrain for past evidence of water and how the Red Planet is changing, we might miss it. But the craft captured the agency’s defunct and surrounding landing site, slowly being blanketed in desert dust.
“Can you spot @NASAInSight?” NASA asked on X (formerly Twitter). “The retired lander was recently spotted by the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter. By studying InSight’s landing site over time, scientists can see how quickly dust accumulates, which helps estimate the age of other surface disturbances.”
The InSight lander’s mission ended in December 2022, after four productive years of investigating geologic activity on Mars. The robot measured over 1,300 , including a “monster” temblor, providing further evidence that Mars isn’t nearly geologically dead. It analyzed , and also beamed back daily weather reports.
Yet unlike and Curiosity rovers, which are nuclear-powered, the InSight lander ran on solar power. Martian dust had expectedly of the lander by blanketing its solar panels in a thick layer of sediment. Eventually, its batteries died.
At the center of the image below is InSight. Looking closely, you can see its two deployed circular solar panels sandwiching the main body.

Credit: NASA

Credit: NASA / JPL-Caltech / Lockheed Martin Space
Other past Martian explorers also rest quietly in the Red Planet’s global desert, including the Phoenix lander, , and . NASA has spotted discarded , too.
One day, perhaps, these relics of early Martian exploration will be protected, similar to national park sites on Earth today.
For now, InSight collects dust on the flat equatorial plains of Elysium Planitia.





