Posted on 12/05/2005 5:59:30 PM PST by NormsRevenge
SAN FRANCISCO - Nearly two years after NASA's twin rovers parachuted to Mars, a Jekyll-and-Hyde picture is emerging about the planet's past and whether it could have supported life.
Both Spirit and Opportunity uncovered geologic evidence of a wet past, a sign that ancient Mars may have been hospitable to life. But new findings reveal the Red Planet was also once such a hostile place that the environment may have prevented life from developing.
"For much of its history, it was a very forbidding place," said mission principal investigator Steven Squyres of Cornell University.
Scientists stressed that the rovers were investigating a snapshot in geologic time and that it's possible that other regions of Mars that have yet to be explored could have had a different environment.
The new analyses were presented Monday at an American Geophysical Union meeting in San Francisco.
Since landing on opposite sides of Mars in January 2004, the six-wheel rovers found conclusive evidence that the planet once had water based on examination of water-altered bedrock at their respective sites.
But the sedimentary rocks in the Martian plains where Opportunity landed also painted a picture of a past environment some 3 billion to 4 billion years ago that fluctuated between being very acidic and arid conditions that were probably unfavorable to life.
The Gusev Crater region where Spirit touched down revealed an even more violent history. Three outcrops examined by the rover displayed deposits of water-altered debris from explosive events. Hot ash rained from the sky and space objects bombarded the surface about 4 billion years ago. During that time, water was present, but not a large amount.
Scientists acknowledged that such harsh environments probably would have posed challenges for life to start, but they did not rule out the possibility that limited life forms could have thrived under these extreme conditions.
They pointed to similar environments found on Earth in which primitive creatures adapt and live in radical habitats including ocean hot springs, volcanic craters and polar glaciers.
At the very least, scientists said, the sites where the rovers landed may have been suitable for life when water was present. These areas deserve further scrutiny, including a possible sample return of Martian rock or soil to Earth to determine whether fossilized life exists, they said.
Also Monday, the European Space Agency said its Mars Express spacecraft found evidence that Mars underwent a major global climate change. Data collected by the spacecraft showed that Mars once was moist and had surface water that disappeared about 3 1/2 billion years ago, leaving the planet dry and cold.
Present-day Mars is dusty, dry and cold with no apparent sign of life on its barren, rust-colored surface. Since 2004, the twin rovers have dazzled scientists with discoveries that point to a more lively ancient environment.
The solar-powered, golf cart-sized robotic explorers outlasted their primary, three-month mission long ago and are operating on overtime. They are managed by NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena.
In August, Spirit climbed to the top of a Martian hill as tall as the Statue of Liberty. After a month at the summit, the rover is making its way down to explore a basin that holds geologic promise. Spirit recently did some nighttime viewing of the sky and photographed a lunar eclipse of Mars' moon Phobos.
Meanwhile, Opportunity's robotic arm became stalled while trying to examine a layered outcrop and engineers are working to fix it. The rover is facing rough driving on its way across plains to Victoria Crater, about eight times bigger than Endurance Crater, a 430-foot-diameter crater previously studied by Opportunity.
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On the Net:
American Geophysical Union: http://www.agu.org
Mars Rovers: http://marsrovers.jpl.nasa.gov/home/index.html
This photo taken May 19, 2005, provided by NASA, shows a false color image captured by Mars Exploration Rover Spirit. It shows the rim of Gusev crater on Mars. This picture of the western sky was obtained using Pancam's 750-nanometer, 530-nanometer and 430-nanometer color filters. This filter combination allows false color images to be generated that are similar to what a human would see, but with the colors slightly exaggerated. Nearly two years after NASA's twin rovers parachuted to Mars, a Jekyll-and-Hyde picture is emerging about the planet's past and whether it could have supported life. Both Spirit and Opportunity uncovered geologic evidence of a wet past, a sign that ancient Mars may have been hospitable to life. But new findings reveal the Red Planet was also once such a hostile place that the environment may have prevented life from developing. (AP Photo/NASA/JPL/Texas A&M/Cornell)
Oh, pardon me - I thought this was about Karl! ;*)
So that puts the catastrophic event sometime during the day after 3 1/2 billion years ago?
NASA's Mars Opportunity rover captured this image of an outcrop called 'Olympia' along the northwestern margin of the 'Erebus' crater on the planet Mars in this photograph released by NASA December 5, 2005. NASA's durable twin Mars rovers have successfully explored the surface of Mars for a full Martian year (687 Earth days). NO SALES NO ARCHIVES REUTERS/NASA/JPL-Caltech/Cornell/Handout
But the question remains, is San Francisco capable of supporting life?
Yeah the fact that the planet is barren is a pretty good tip off that Mars might not be too hospitable to life.
Rovers Find Evidence Mars Was Once Hostile
Sorry, I couldn't resist.
Being acidic is no barrier to life. Lots of critters seem to do fine in the immediate vicinity of "black smokers" in the ocean depths where the pH is quite low.
More hostile than it is now? Isn't the average temperature something like 200 below zero?
Once hostile, but thanks to President Lyndon LaRouche's tough stand against Marsism, Mars is now an ally of sorts.
Have they found the remains of the martian SUV's that caused the global warming yet?
So, like Uranus, it has noxious fumes swirling around it?
Ping for an interesting article about Mars.
Let's see the DNC spin this one. It must have been Bush's fault. Karl Rove is hostile to all life forms. The neo cons have declared war on all non Christian Martians. The non-compliance of US to the Kyoto Accord has extended its ramifications to Mars...
All we need is the Scream Team, headed by Howard the Duck Dean on the Sunday morning news shows, a few thousand moron marchers in several cities with photographers, and the drug ridden editorial staff of the NYT and the WaPo putting together their latest campaign against the Right.
Most likely, yes, but not intelligent life.
But the question remains, is San Francisco capable of supporting life?
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Only life forms hostile to America, normal people, and the rule of law.
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