Since we've known about sulfates on Mars for some time, the discovery doesn't tell us anything new in that area. We're yet to find any signs of life on Mars, anyway. But we do keep stumbling across the remains of bits and pieces that living organisms would find useful, including chemistrywater, and past habitable conditions.

Stuck here on Earth, we're fairly limited in how we can access Mars. Curiosity's instruments were able to analyze and identify the sulfurous rocks in the Gediz Vallis Channel, but if it hadn't taken a route that rolled over and cracked one open, it could have been some time since we found it.

The next step will be to figure out exactly how, based on what we know about Mars, that sulfur may have come to be there. That's going to take a bit more work, possibly involving some detailed modeling of Mars's geological evolution.

Meanwhile, Curiosity will continue to collect data on the same. The Gediz Vallis channel is an area rich in Martian history, an ancient waterway whose rocks now bear the imprint of the ancient river that once flowed over them, billions of years ago.

Curiosity has drilled a hole in one of the rocks, taking a powdered sample of its interior for chemical analysis, and is now trundling its way deeper along the channel, to see what other surprises might be waiting just around the next rock.