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Hard at work on Mars

NASA/PhoenixNASA's Phoenix lander is busy scooping Martian soil and dumping it into the laboratory's cooker. Spacecraft controllers have released another amazingly sharp image of the bleak scene as their shovel hovers alongside the solar panels that are powering the whole enterprise. Here's a better look.

The first data from the cooker - analyzing the chemical contents of the dirt - are due back shortly. For a gallery of Phoenix images, click here.

About the bloggers

Chris Emery's interest in science stems from an afterschool job cleaning grease spots off a gas station parking lot. His motto: there's nothing like scrubbing a grease spot to get you thinking about the nature of the universe. He joined The Sun in 2006 and covers science, medicine and technology.

Dennis O'Brien has an abiding interest in the natural world and is constantly amazed at how complicated the simple things in life can be. He's been a reporter at The Sun since 1987 and has been writing about science for five years.

Frank Roylance is the old coot on this blog. He joined The Evening Sun in 1980 and The Sun in 1993. He covers science for the paper, and writes the paper's Weather Blog and Weather Page commentary. He's been married since Hector was a pup, with two grown kids who also think science is cool.

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