Astrobiologist explains Perseverance rover’s possible detection of ancient Mars life


The search for extraterrestrial life is as much about basic biology, geology and chemistry as it is about seeking to understand our place in the universe. The former came into the spotlight last month, when NASA‘s Perseverance rover found a rock with features and chemistry that could have been produced by ancient microbial life on Mars.

On July 21, the rover sampled an arrow-shaped rock, which scientists have nicknamed Cheyava Falls after the highest waterfall in Arizona’s Grand Canyon, and found that it hosts organic compounds, which are the building blocks of life as we know it. Wisping through the length of the rock are veins of calcium sulfate, whose presence suggest a fluid — very likely water — once flowed through the rock. Finally, the rock is speckled with white spots with black rims, in which the rover’s instruments detected iron phosphate molecules. On Earth, similar “leopard spots” are indicative of fossilized records of microbes. In the Cheyava Falls Mars rock, they may be signs of chemical reactions that occurred billions of years ago, which could have served as an energy source for ancient microbial life, the Perseverance science team shared in a NASA statement on July 25.



Source link