NASA Researchers Claim Evidence of Present Life on Mars
The scientists, Carol Stoker and Larry Lemke of NASA’s Ames Research Center in Silicon Valley, told the group that they have submitted their findings to the journal Nature for publication in May, and their paper currently is being peer reviewed.
if this stands up to scrutiny it will be very exciting.........
space.com
WASHINGTON --
A pair of NASA scientists told a group of space officials at a private meeting
here Sunday that they have found strong evidence that life may exist today
on Mars, hidden away in caves and sustained by pockets of water.
The
scientists, Carol Stoker and Larry Lemke of NASA’s Ames Research Center in
Silicon Valley, told the group that they have submitted their findings to
the journal Nature for publication in May, and their paper currently is being
peer reviewed.
What
Stoker and Lemke have found, according to several attendees of the private
meeting, is not direct proof of life on Mars, but methane signatures and other
signs of possible biological activity remarkably similar to those recently
discovered in caves here on Earth.
Stoker
and other researchers have long theorized that the Martian subsurface could
harbor biological organisms that have developed unusual strategies for existing
in extreme environments. That suspicion led Stoker and a team of U.S. and
Spanish researchers in 2003 to southwestern Spain to search
for subsurface life near the Rio Tinto
river—so-called because of its reddish tint—the product of iron being dissolved
in its highly acidic water.
Stoker did not respond to messages
left Tuesday on her voice mail at Ames.
Stoker
told SPACE.com in 2003, weeks before leading
the expedition to southwestern Spain, that by studying the very acidic Rio
Tinto, she and other scientists hoped
to characterize the potential for a “chemical bioreactor” in the subsurface
– an underground microbial ecosystem of sorts that might well control the
chemistry of the surface environment.
Making
such a discovery at Rio Tinto, Stoker said in 2003,
would mean uncovering a new, previously uncharacterized metabolic strategy
for living in the subsurface. “For that reason, the search for life in the
Rio Tinto is a good analog for searching for life on
Mars,” she said.
Stoker
told her private audience Sunday evening that by comparing discoveries made
at Rio Tinto with data collected by ground-based
telescopes and orbiting spacecraft, including the European Space Agency’s
Mars Express, she and Lemke have made a very a strong case that life exists
below Mars’ surface.
The
two scientists, according to sources at the Sunday meeting, based their case
in part on Mars’ fluctuating methane
signatures that could be a sign of an active underground biosphere and
nearby surface concentrations of the sulfate jarosite, a mineral salt found on Earth in hot springs and
other acidic bodies of water like Rio Tinto
that have been found to harbor life despite their inhospitable environments.
One
of NASA’s Mars Exploration Rovers, Opportunity, bolstered
the case for water on Mars when it discovered jarosite
and other mineral salts on a rocky outcropping in Merdiani
Planum, the intrepid rover’s landing
site chosen because scientists believe the area was once covered by salty
sea.
Stoker
and Lemke’s research could lead the search for Martian biology underground,
where standing
water would help account for the curious methane signatures the two have
been analyzing.
“They
are desperate to find out what could be producing the methane,” one attendee
told Space News. “Their answer
is drill, drill, drill.”
NASA
has no firm plans for sending a drill-equipped lander
to Mars, but the agency is planning to launch a powerful new rover in 2009
that could help shed additional light on Stoker and Lemke’s intriguing findings.
Dubbed the Mars Science Laboratory, the nuclear-powered rover will range farther
than any of its predecessors and will be carrying an advanced mass spectrometer
to sniff out methane with greater sensitivity than any instrument flown to
date.
In
1996 a team of NASA and Stanford University researchers created a stir when
they published findings that meteorites recovered from the Allen Hills region
of Antarctica contained evidence of possible past life on Mars. Those findings
remain controversial, with many researchers unconvinced that those meteorites
held even possible evidence that very primitive microbial life had once existed
on Mars.
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Last modified
2005-03-02 03:20 AM