You mean the rock core or the coating? I don't think there's much doubt that core is rock, what kind is in doubt, but since it appears to be hexagonal, basalt would be almost certain were it not for the fact that it's lighter that almost every other rock around it. The white/really light stuff is something else. Ice (CO2 or H2O) has been suggested, but it would be really odd to have ice under a rock sitting in an environment with no other occurrences in sight.S. Bilderback wrote:My question is now; are we going to find out if the light tone is basaltic or a precipitate?
Astronton (sorry if I got that wrong, I'm new here and don't know if I can go back to more than 1 post in replying) suggested that there are other such rocks and indeed blowing the scene up to pixelated chaos there are a few that may be chunks of the faceted material, although most could also be sun-angle phenomena.
I'm no Mars geologist in spite of teenage dreams 40+ years ago, just a garden variety Earth one, so all I gotta say is that from all the Mars pics I've seen this thing is unique.