Life on Mars?
It's hard enough to identify fossilized microbes on Earth. How would we ever recognize them on Mars?
- By Carl Zimmer
- Smithsonian magazine, May 2005, Subscribe
On August 7, 1996, reporters, photographers and television camera operators surged into NASA headquarters in Washington, D.C. The crowd focused not on the row of seated scientists in NASA’s auditorium but on a small, clear plastic box on the table in front of them. Inside the box was a velvet pillow, and nestled on it like a crown jewel was a rock—from Mars. The scientists announced that they’d found signs of life inside the meteorite. NASA administrator Daniel Goldin gleefully said it was an “unbelievable” day. He was more accurate than he knew.
The rock, the researchers explained, had formed 4.5 billion years ago on Mars, where it remained until 16 million years ago, when it was launched into space, probably by the impact of an asteroid. The rock wandered the inner solar system until 13,000 years ago, when it fell to Antarctica. It sat on the ice near AllanHills until 1984, when snowmobiling geologists scooped it up.
Scientists headed by David McKay of the JohnsonSpaceCenter in Houston found that the rock, called ALH84001, had a peculiar chemical makeup. It contained a combination of minerals and carbon compounds that on Earth are created by microbes. It also had crystals of magnetic iron oxide, called magnetite, which some bacteria produce. Moreover, McKay presented to the crowd an electron microscope view of the rock showing chains of globules that bore a striking resemblance to chains that some bacteria form on Earth. “We believe that these are indeed microfossils from Mars,” McKay said, adding that the evidence wasn’t “absolute proof” of past Martian life but rather “pointers in that direction.”
Among the last to speak that day was J. William Schopf, a University of California at Los Angeles paleobiologist, who specializes in early Earth fossils. “I’ll show you the oldest evidence of life on this planet,” Schopf said to the audience, and displayed a slide of a 3.465 billion-year-old fossilized chain of microscopic globules that he had found in Australia. “These are demonstrably fossils,” Schopf said, implying that NASA’s Martian pictures were not. He closed by quoting the astronomer Carl Sagan: “Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence.”
Despite Schopf’s note of skepticism, the NASA announcement was trumpeted worldwide. “Mars lived, rock shows Meteorite holds evidence of life on another world,” said the New York Times. “Fossil from the red planet may prove that we are not alone,” declared The Independent of London.
Over the past nine years, scientists have taken Sagan’s words very much to heart. They’ve scrutinized the Martian meteorite (which is now on view at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural History), and today few believe that it harbored Martian microbes.
The controversy has prompted scientists to ask how they can know whether some blob, crystal or chemical oddity is a sign of life—even on Earth. Adebate has flared up over some of the oldest evidence for life on Earth, including the fossils that Schopf proudly displayed in 1996. Major questions are at stake in this debate, including how life first evolved on Earth. Some scientists propose that for the first few hundred million years that life existed, it bore little resemblance to life as we know it today.
NASA researchers are taking lessons from the debate about life on Earth to Mars. If all goes as planned, a new generation of rovers will arrive on Mars within the next decade. These missions will incorporate cutting-edge biotechnology designed to detect individual molecules made by Martian organisms, either living or long dead.
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Comments (8)
What about underground microbial life on earth? What is it like? What are the temperatures underground here and on Mars? Is there water underground on Mars? Is that water liquid? If small world life can thrive at Mono Lake in California with heavy concentrations of salt and arsenic, Mars is not a deal breaker. Whether DNA/RNA would develop in the first place is longer odds than survival. The first step to bacteria is the shocker. If double-helix critters did develop and then flourish some billions of years ago, then there's no reason to be surprised if our astropaleontologists find that a few of these organisms have adapted to life in the deep dark. Also, double-helix might not be the only way to go for replication. GO NASA !
Posted by TuffsNotEnuff on April 2,2013 | 06:07 AM
They will never find life on Mars, perhaps some microbes....but that is about it! The planet has been hostile to accommodate life (for millions of years) as we know it. The numbers speak for themselves. Maybe life is possible elsewhere in space and time, but life in this solar system, apart from our planet or other solid surface planets (Mercury, Venus, Mars and Pluto) is IMPOSSIBLE, never mind the gaseous planets. Were are the cities, roads and proof of past civilizations on Mars and other solid surface planets on all the millions of photographs and video of the entire library of interplanetary reconnaissance flights and earth observations with our billion dollars modern technology? NONE FOUND
Posted by Francois Moller on December 5,2012 | 03:42 AM
Mars is smaller and colder than the earth.it has a Thin atmosphere and is covered with red rock and dust. It is sometimes called the red planet. By roaa essam.
Posted by Roaa on October 16,2012 | 12:36 PM
Just kidding! This is pretty cool! I wonder if us HUMANS can go on Mars at some point create more life (?) Thanks! Great site for my project! I hope there is some "friendly" life ob Mars that speaks english!
Posted by Ally on September 17,2012 | 03:17 PM
In reply to James Hennesey, the "face on Mars" disappeared when higher resolution images were taken by a subsequent mission. See here: http://science.nasa.gov/science-news/science-at-nasa/2001/ast24may_1/ For your second question, scientists would study it and we'd all celebrate not being alone in the universe!
Posted by Daniel Hudon on August 15,2012 | 08:20 AM
If life is proven what will happen to religion?
Posted by Tim Lahr on February 17,2012 | 01:44 PM
people should go and live on and research it and send a robot along after it with fuel to go back home and food and water too
Posted by amija on May 9,2011 | 09:30 PM
A couple of questions of my own if I may. What ever happened to object or site that looked like a face? Along with, what would you along with the government do if you were to find life forms from another planet? Please contact me thank you
Posted by james hennesey on June 9,2008 | 07:56 PM