NASA’s Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter has snapped an image of a mysterious circular landform that scientists say could be volcanic in origin.

Excerpt from csmonitor.com

A NASA Mars probe has photographed a strange Red Planet landform that resembles a freshly baked pie.

The mysterious circular feature on Mars, which was imaged by the HiRISE camera aboard NASA’s Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO), lies in the “Athabasca” region near the Martian equator and measures about 1.2 miles (2 kilometers) wide. It appears to be an island in a sea of relatively smooth lava and possibly had a volcanic origin, NASA officials say.

“Perhaps lava has intruded underneath this mound and pushed it up from beneath. It looks as if material is missing from the mound, so it is also possible that there was a significant amount of ice in the mound that was driven out by the heat of the lava,” NASA officials wrote in a description of the image, which was released on Wednesday (Dec. 3).

“There are an array of features like this in the region that continue to puzzle scientists,” they added. “We hope that close inspection of this HiRISE image, and others around it, will provide some clues regarding its formation.”

MRO is one of five active probes circling Mars at the moment. The other three are NASA’s Mars Odyssey and MAVEN spacecraft, India’s Mangalyaan probe and Europe’s Mars Express.