A penny on Mars, captured in a photo by NASA’s Curiosity rover. (Image credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/MSSS)

Can you imagine picking up a lucky penny on Mars?

Curiosity rover captured a surprisingly Earthly image on the surface of Mars. With its Mars Hand Lens Imager (MHLI), the rover snapped a close-up image of a penny. (To clarify: The penny wasn’t found there by accident; it traveled to Mars with the rover.)

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This image was captured on Oct. 2, 2013 on the 411th sol, or Mars day, of the Curiosity rover’s mission on the planet. On the penny’s surface, reddish Martian dust has collected over the 14 months that the mission had already been on Mars by that point.

said in a statement in which NASA refers to the coin as a “lucky penny on Mars.”

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“If it is a whole cliff face, she’ll ask a person to stand in the shot. If it is a view from a meter or so away, she might use a rock hammer. If it is a close-up, as the MAHLI can take, she might pull something small out of her pocket. Like a penny.”