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| Image above: NASA's Opportunity rover captured
this view of "Burns Cliff" after driving right to
the base of this southeastern portion of the inner wall of "Endurance
Crater." The view combines frames taken by Opportunity's
panoramic camera between Nov. 13 and 20, 2004. Image credit:
NASA/JPL/Cornell |
Nasa Rover helps reveal possible secrets of Martian life
Life may have had a tough time getting started in the ancient environment
that left its mark in the Martian rock layers examined by NASA's
Opportunity rover.
The most thorough analysis yet of the rover's discoveries reveals
the challenges life may have faced in the harsh Martian environment.
"This is the most significant set of papers our team has published,"
said Dr. Steve Squyres of Cornell University, Ithaca, N.Y. He is
principal investigator for the science instruments on Opportunity
and its twin rover, Spirit.
The lengthy reports reflect more thorough analysis of Opportunity's
findings than earlier papers.
Scientists have been able to deduce conditions in the Meridiani
Planum region of Mars were sometimes wet, strongly acidic and oxidizing.
Those conditions probably posed stiff challenges to the origin of
Martian life.
Based on Opportunity's data, nine papers by 60 researchers in volume
240, issue 1 of the journal Earth and Planetary Science Letters
discuss what this part of the Martian Meridiani Planum region was
like eons ago. The papers present comparisons to some harsh habitats
on Earth and examine the ramifications for possible life on Mars.
Dr. Andrew Knoll of Harvard University, Cambridge, Mass., a paper
co-author, said, "Life that had evolved in other places or
earlier times on Mars, if any did, might adapt to Meridiani conditions,
but the kind of chemical reactions we think were important to giving
rise to life on Earth simply could not have happened at Meridiani."
Scientists analyzed data about stacked sedimentary rock layers
23 feet thick, exposed inside "Endurance Crater." They
identified three divisions within the stack. The lowest, oldest
portion had the signature of dry sand dunes; the middle portion,
windblown sheets of sand with all the particles produced in part
by previous evaporation
of liquid water. The upper portion corresponded to layers Opportunity
found earlier inside a smaller crater near its landing site.
Materials in all three divisions were wet both before and after
the layers were deposited by either wind or water. Researchers described
chemical evidence that the sand grains deposited in the layers had
been altered by water before the layers formed. Scientists analyzed
how acidic water moving through the layers after they were in place
caused changes such as the formation of hematite-rich spherules
within the rocks.
Experimental and theoretical testing reinforces the interpretation
of changes caused by acidic water interacting with the rock layers.
"We made simulated Mars rocks in our laboratory then infused
acidic fluids through them," said researcher Nicholas Tosca
from the State University of New York. "Our theoretical model
shows the minerals predicted to form when those fluids evaporate
bear a remarkable
similarity to the minerals identified in the Meridiani outcrop."
The stack of layers in Endurance Crater resulted from a changeable
environment perhaps 3.5 to 4 billion years ago. The area may have
looked like salt flats occasionally holding water, surrounded by
dunes. The White Sands region in New Mexico bears a similar physical
resemblance. "For the chemistry and mineralogy of the environment,
an
acidic river basin named Rio Tinto, in Spain, provides useful
similarities," said Dr. David Fernandez-Remolar of Spain's
Centro de Astrobiologia.
Many types of microbes live in the Rio Tinto environment, one of
the reasons for concluding that ancient Meridiani could have been
habitable. However, the organisms at Rio Tinto are descended from
populations that live in less acidic and stressful habitats. If
Meridiani had any life, it might have had to originate in a different
habitat.
"You need to be very careful when you are talking about the
prospect for life on Mars," Knoll said. "We've looked
at only a very small parcel of Martian real estate. The geological
record Opportunity has examined comes from a relatively short period
out of Mars' long history."
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