To create the eye-popping shot, NASA combined newly received data from the rover's twin navcams, which sit on the remote-sensing mast's WALL-E-like head.
These cameras act like left and right eyes for capturing stereo views of the Martian landscape (see images below).
The navcams can see out to 100 metres and will be used not only to plan the rover's path forward but also for deciding where to aim the MastCam and ChemCam.
MastCam can take colour pictures, video and stitched panoramas, while ChemCam will fire a laser from up to 7 metres away to vaporise rocks and analyse their composition via spectroscopy.
Once the team completes calibrating the cameras, they'll instruct the navcams to take a 360-degree panorama, helping rover drivers get a good hard look at the landing site before driving off toward their main science target, the intriguing mountain inside Gale named Mount Sharp.
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