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Mystery of 'jelly doughnut' Martian rock solved

Scientists have solved the mystery of the "jelly doughnut" rock on Mars that appeared to come out of nowhere.

Mystery rock white around the outside, dark red in the middle

This composite image shows before-and-after images taken by the Opportunity rover. Researchers have determined the rock shaped like a jelly doughnut on the right is a piece of a larger rock broken and moved by the wheel of NASA's Mars Exploration Rover Opportunity in early January. (NASA/AP)

Scientists have solved the mystery of the "jelly doughnut" rock on Mars that appeared to come out of nowhere.

NASA said Friday that a wheel of the rover Opportunity broke it off a larger rock and then kicked it into the field of view.

The internet was abuzz last month when the space agency released side-by-side images of the same patch of ground. Only one image showed the rock, which was white around the outside and dark red in the middle, and less than 5.08 centimetres wide.

Scientists had suspected that one of Opportunity's wheels kicked the rock as it drove. They received confirmation after analyzing recent images of the original piece of rock.

Opportunity recently celebrated 10 years on Mars. Its twin Spirit stopped communicating in 2010.