The Astrobiology Web · About Us · Advertising · Contact Us · Comments Wednesday, September 8, 2010    
 

The Astrobiology Web, Your Guide to the Living Universe
Home | Calendar - News - Gallery - Space Directory - Station Guide - Space Weather

Mars News | SpaceRef - Astrobiology Web - Pop-up News
PRESS RELEASE
Date Released: Monday, November 30, 2009
Source: Johnson Space Center

New Study Adds to FInding of Ancient Life Signs In Mars Meteorite

image

HOUSTON - Using more advanced analytical instruments now available, a Johnson Space Center research team has reexamined the 1996 finding that a meteorite contains strong evidence that life may have existed on ancient Mars.

The new research focused on investigating alternate proposals for the creation of materials thought to be signs of ancient life found in the meteorite. The new study argues that ancient life remains the most plausible explanation for the materials and structures found in the meteorite.

In 1996, a group of scientists led by David McKay, Everett Gibson and Kathie Thomas-Keprta of NASAs Johnson Space Center (JSC) in Houston published an article in Science announcing the discovery of biogenic evidence in the ALH84001 meteorite. A newly published paper revisits that original hypothesis with new analyses. The paper, Origin of Magnetite Nanocrystals in Martian Meteorite ALH84001, by Thomas-Keprta and coauthors Simon Clemett, McKay, Gibson and Susan Wentworth, all scientists in the Astromaterials Research and Exploration Science Directorate at JSC, is in the November issue of the journal Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta of The Geochemical Society and The Meteoritical Society.

Magnetite crystals in ALH84001 have been a focus of debate about the possibility of life on Mars. Magnetite is an iron-bearing, magnetic mineral. On Earth, some water and soil bacteria secrete the mineral within their cells. The 1996 study suggested that some magnetite crystals associated with carbonate globules in ALH84001 are biogenic because they share many characteristics with those found in bacteria on Earth. Other scientists have argued instead that the magnetite in ALH84001 was likely caused by inorganic processes, and that those same processes can be recreated artificially in the laboratory by heating carbonates in a process known as thermal decomposition, forming magnetite identical to that found in the Mars meteorite.

In this new study, the JSC research team reassessed the leading alternative non-biologic hypothesis that heating or shock decomposition produced the magnetites. The authors argue that their new results do not support the heating hypothesis for the formation of the magnetites. They conclude that the biogenic explanation is a more viable hypothesis for the origin of the magnetites.

In this study, we interpret our results to suggest that the in situ inorganic hypotheses are inconsistent with the data, and thus infer that the biogenic hypothesis is still a viable explanation, said lead author Thomas-Keprta, senior scientist for Barrios Technology at JSC.

We believe that the biogenic hypothesis is stronger now than when we first proposed it 13 years ago, said Gibson, NASA senior scientist.

In addition to the new paper on ALH84001, the JSC team has published a paper that identifies shapes or morphologies in Martian meteorites that resemble known microfossil and microbial shapes in samples from Earth. These new shapes, seen with a scanning electron microscope, are termed biomorphs because of their close resemblance to known, biologically produced features on Earth. The biomorphs observed in the meteorites will be the focus of the JSC team with more detailed studies, including chemical and isotopic analyses.

The evidence supporting the possibility of past life on Mars has been slowly building up during the past decade, said McKay, NASA chief scientist for exploration and astrobiology, JSC. This evidence includes signs of past surface water including remains of rivers, lakes and possibly oceans, signs of current water near or at the surface, water-derived deposits of clay minerals and carbonates in old terrain, and the recent release of methane into the Martian atmosphere, a finding that may have several explanations, including the presence of microbial life, the main source of methane on Earth."

To view the two papers, imagery and associated materials on the Internet, visit: http://www.nasa.gov/centers/johnson/home/mars_meteorite.html

For more information on NASA and agency programs, visit: www.nasa.gov

Origins of magnetite nanocrystals in Martian meteorite ALH84001, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta, Volume 73, Issue 21, 1 November 2009, Pages 6631-6677

Find educational astronomy software at Nameastarlive.com


News from Commercial Space Watch

- NASA Loves A Good Challenge - Not Business As Usual

- Prepared Remarks at AIAA Space 2010 By NASA Deputy Administrator Lori Garver

- Planet Resource Recovery, Inc. Co-Sponsors NASA Johnson Space Center Emerging Technology & Partnerships Event at Rice University

- GLONASS M Navigation Triplets Launched Successfully by Proton M

- Northrop Grumman Employee Awarded NASA Silver Snoopy Award

- Commercial Space Transportation Advisory Committee Open Meeting 7 Oct 2010

- Globalstar Takes Delivery of Three Additional Satellites From Thales Alenia Space as it Prepares for October Launch

- NASA KSC Award: Life-Like Robot

- Letter to Rep. Gordon Regarding House Science Committee Authorization Bill As It Relates to NASA

- ATK and NASA Successfully Test the Second Five-Segment Ares Development Motor (DM-2)

- ARES Corporation Named NASA Dryden Flight Research Center Small Business Subcontractor of the Year

- Masten Space Systems Wins NASA Suborbital Contract

- Ball Aerospace Wins Contract to Build WorldView-3 for DigitalGlobe

- NASA's New Building Receives Gold Certification for Going Green

- NASA Awards Raytheon $120 Million Contract

- Play classic casino games online at Kerching Casino. Sign up for a 100% bonus and start p

- Always play bingo with recommended sites.

-

- online bingo latest online bingo game reviews, bonuses and bingo news

-


advertisment

Recent Press Releases

Ancient microbes responsible for breathing life into ocean 'deserts'

Geologists revisit the Great Oxygenation Event

Looking for the Coolest Forms of Life on Earth

NASA Scientists to Share Ideas at SETIcon Gathering

Orion Nebula Gives Clues to Origin of Life on Earth

NASA Reveals Key to Unlock Mysterious Red Glow in Space

'Benford Beacons' Mark New Approach to Find Frugal Aliens

Expedition to Mid-Cayman Rise identifies unusual variety of deep sea vents

Zapping Titan-like Atmosphere with UV Creates Life Precursors

NASA's Des Marais Elected Fellow of the American Academy of Microbiology

Super-Complex Organic molecules Found in Interstellar Space

NASA Scientists Dive Deep to Learn More About Life on the Moon, Mars

Hunting for Fossils on Europa

NASA Narrows Selection of Fundamental Space Biology Missions

Could Life Survive on Mars? Yes, Expert Says

Looking for great prices on Burton Snowboards? Visit PortersTahoe.com

mortgage web site design


Home | Calendar - News - Gallery - Space Directory - Space Station Guide

SpaceRef - SpaceRef Asia - SpaceRef Canada - SpaceRef Europe - Astrobiology - Moon Today - Mars TV
Commercial Space Watch - Mars Today - Jupiter Today - Saturn Today - Space Elevator - Space Wire - Nano2Sol

Astrobiology Web Copyright © 1999-2010 SpaceRef Interactive Inc. All rights reserved. Privacy Policy