Is there life on MARS ?

9 months ago
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Is this proof Mars once had life? Odd patchwork of polygon-shaped mud cracks suggests Red Planet used to have Earth-like conditions 3.6 billion years ago

NASA's Curiosity rover has detected an unusual array of cracks on Mount Sharp
Sediments found here indicate that wet and dry cycles may once have occurred

And now it has emerged that the car-sized robot may have found something.

In 2021, it detected an unusual array of polygon-shaped cracks within the soil that scientists now believe is evidence that the Red Planet once had Earth-like conditions that could have allowed microorganisms to survive 3.6 billion years ago.

The mysterious mud cracks on the bed of an ancient lake hint that wet and dry cycles comparable to the seasons we experience on our planet today may have existed on Mars.

Such cycles are vital for encouraging the formation of carbon-based 'polymers' - known as the building blocks of organic compounds and even DNA.

'This is the first tangible evidence we’ve seen that the ancient climate of Mars had such regular, Earth-like wet-dry cycles,' said lead author William Rapin of France's Institut de Recherche en Astrophysique et Planétologie.

'But even more important is that wet-dry cycles are helpful – maybe even required – for the molecular evolution that could lead to life.'

Curiosity was launched from Florida's Cape Canaveral in 2011 as part of a two-year mission to gather information on whether Mars could support life.

Due to its success, the mission was extended indefinitely, with the mud cracks detected just two years ago after the rover ascended the 15,840ft-high Mount Sharp.

These were found at the site of an ancient lake, wedged between a clay-rich sediment layer and a more salty sulfite layer.

The two contrasting layers suggest that wet and dry cycles once occurred, as clay usually arises in moist conditions and sulfites generally form as any water dries up.

It is believed the unusual cracks also formed in the midst of this, transforming from dried up 'T-junctions' to hexagonal shapes due to water exposure.

Long chains of carbon-based molecules known as polymers may have formed too, which are largely known to be the chemical building blocks of life.

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