07/16/2026 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 07/16/2026 12:06
50 Years After Viking: The Gateway to Mars Exploration
Fifty years ago, humanity saw Mars from the surface for the first time.
On July 20, 1976, NASA's Viking 1 landed in Chryse Planitia and returned the first images from the Martian surface, transforming Mars from a distant world into a reachable destination we could explore. Weeks later, the agency's Viking 2 landed in Utopia Planitia, proving sustained exploration on the Red Planet was possible.
The Viking 1 lander team was a massive, nationwide collaboration spearheaded by NASA's Langley Research Center (LaRC), which managed the overall project, alongside the agency's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) and the Martin Marietta Corporation, one of the companies that later became Lockheed Martin, who designed and built the lander, as well as provided the Titan launch vehicle for the spacecraft.
Why it matters: The Viking 1 lander didn't just make history. It laid the scientific and engineering foundation for nearly every Mars surface mission that followed.
Viking's accomplishments include:
While the Viking landers didn't find definitive evidence of life, they fundamentally changed our understanding of Mars and launched a new era of planetary exploration.
During the five decades since Viking 1 and Viking 2 landed on the Red Planet, we've helped NASA explore Mars from orbit and on the surface, enabling many of the discoveries that continue to reshape our understanding of the Red Planet.
Highlights include:
Each mission has built upon Viking's discoveries, expanding our understanding of Mars and bringing us closer to future human exploration.
Fifty years ago, Viking 1 gave humanity its first view from the surface of Mars.
Since then, the missions we've supported have helped reveal ancient water, map the planet from orbit, probe its interior and unlock clues about its atmosphere and history. Each mission has built upon the discoveries that came before it, advancing our understanding of one of humanity's most fascinating destinations.
Today, as NASA and its partners prepare for future robotic missions and pursue the long-term goal of sending humans to Mars, the technologies, engineering expertise and scientific knowledge developed over decades of exploration provide a foundation for what comes next.
The next chapter of Mars exploration is still being written. And like Viking before it, it begins with the courage to go farther than ever before.