CHINA'S Chang'e-4 lunar rover, which successfully landed on the moon in January, has found something rather strange and perplexing - an oddly coloured "gel-like" substance that can't yet be explained.

According to Our Space, a Chinese government-sanctioned publication that focuses on space and exploration, the substance is described as a "gel with a mysterious lustre".

The Yutu-2 rover made the discovery on lunar day eight - July 25 - and so far, the Chinese space agency has not yet said what it is.

Outside researchers have suggested the gel is "melt glass" that has been created from meteorites hitting the far side of Earth's natural satellite, according to Space.com.

The Yutu-2 moon rover, part of the Chang'e-4 lunar probe, on the far side of the moon. Picture: Getty Images

Tracks made by Yutu-2. Picture: China Lunar Exploration Project



On July 28, the team operating Chang'e-4 was preparing to power down the Yutu-2 rover for daily maintenance when someone from the team looked at the images from the main camera and found a crater with oddly coloured material.

From there, the operating team spoke with lunar scientists, and they decided to keep the rover on and investigate the oddity.

The Chinese Space Agency has not released any official photos of the gel yet, but it has been described in the rover's drive diary.

Photos of the Yutu-2 rover and the tracks it has made on the moon have been published on the official QQ China Lunar Exploration Project blog.

Only three countries, the US, China and Russia, have successfully "soft-landed" on the moon.

This article originally appeared on Fox News and was reproduced with permission