
SourceScientists overseeing NASA's new Mars spacecraft say the lander's robotic arm has touched soil on the red planet for the first time.
The scientists said today that the arm reached out the day before and left an impression that resembles a footprint.
They say it is the first step in a series of actions that will provide soil and ice for the Phoenix Mars lander's experiments.
The robotic arm camera also took images of what is believed to be exposed ice under the lander.
The University of Arizona in Tucson is leading the mission, and NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory is managing it.
Not quite sure why they would bother, but it does have some nice symbolism.
