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Viking: 50 Years on Mars — Poster

A commemorative NASA poster featuring an artist's concept of the Viking lander resting on a rocky Martian landscape. A bright sun sets directly behind the lander, casting a brilliant backlight against a vibrant orange sky that slowly fades into a starry backdrop at the top. A faint, thin white outline of a massive number "50" frames the lander in the background sky. Scattered in the sky and silhouetted along the horizon are various other Mars exploration vehicles from the past 50 years, including three small helicopters overhead, representing the future SkyFall mission, the InSight lander in the far background, the Perseverance rover at right, and the Spirit and Opportunity rovers at left. The NASA logo is in the top right corner. At the bottom left, large white text reads "VIKING," followed by a smaller subheadline: "The lander that broke ground on 50 years of Mars surface exploration."
Throughout history, Mars had been in sight, but never within reach — until July 20, 1976, when NASA’s Viking 1 lander touched down safely and began transmitting the first images from the surface of the Red Planet.
NASA/JPL-Caltech
July 16, 2026
Credit NASA/JPL-Caltech
Historical Date July 20, 2026
Language
  • english

Throughout history, Mars had been in sight, but never within reach — until July 20, 1976, when NASA’s Viking 1 lander touched down safely and began transmitting the first images from the surface of the Red Planet.  

Its twin, Viking 2, arrived a few weeks later, on Sept. 3, 1976. Each of the landers was paired with an orbiter that ferried them to the planet and then remained aloft for years. They gathered unprecedented data and breathtaking images of Mars, in detail that still evokes awe and wonder today.

The landers, on opposite sides of the planet, dug their sample arms into the ground, unearthing the first clues about Mars and the potential for life there. They far outlasted their expected 90-day missions, with the Viking 2 lander operating until 1980, and Viking 1 until 1982. 

These robotic explorers started an investigation that’s lasted 50 years, and continues to go broader and deeper. Mars missions ever since, and those yet to come, seek to uncover whether the planet’s once warm and wet climate was ever habitable to some form of life, as our discoveries help inform sustainability for human exploration in the future. They continue to build on what the Vikings began.

NASA on Mars

This poster celebrates the 50th anniversary of the Viking 1 landing on July 20, 1976, and NASA's continuing surface exploration of Mars since then. It highlights Viking and a selection of missions representing the past, present, and future of Mars surface exploration. Learn more about them, and the rest of NASA’s Mars missions, which includes nearly two dozen landers, rovers, orbiters, and more, at go.nasa/mars-missions