Rover Finds Mars Was Wet Enough for Life
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Tuesday, Mar. 2, 2004
WASHINGTON -- Mars rover Opportunity has found evidence that
the Red Planet was once wet enough for life to exist there, but the
robot has not found any direct traces of living organisms, NASA
scientists announced Tuesday.
"Opportunity has landed in an area of Mars where liquid water
once drenched the surface," said Edward Weiler, associate NASA
administrator for space science, at a news conference. "This area
would have been a good, habitable environment."
A study of a fine, layered rock by the rover detected evidence
of sulfates and other minerals that form in the presence of water.
The finding suggests that if there had been life present when the
rocks were formed, then the living conditions could have permitted
an organism to flourish. The study, however, has found no direct
evidence of life.
"NASA launched the Mars Exploration Rover mission specifically
to check whether at least one part of Mars had a persistently wet
environment that could possibly have been hospitable to life,"
James Garvin, a lead NASA scientist, said in a statement. "Today
we have strong evidence for an exciting answer: Yes."
Opportunity and its twin rover, Spirit, are controlled by a team
of scientists working at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena,
Calif. Scientists there earlier in the week said they had found
exciting results from the work of Opportunity. Details were not
immediately available.
Steve Squyres, a Cornell University scientist and principal
investigator for the science instruments on Opportunity, said the
rover's study of formations near its landing site show that liquid
water once flowed there, changing the chemistry and composition of
the rocks.
"We've been able to read the telltale clues the water left
behind, giving us confidence in that conclusion," Squyres said in
a statement.
Additional studies will determine if the rocks were laid down by
minerals formed at the bottom of a salty lake or sea.
Opportunity landed five weeks ago near an exposed bedrock
embedded in the wall of a small crater.
The rover conducted a chemical analysis of the outcrop,
including a rock named El Capitan by scientists, and found a
concentration of sulphur rich in magnesium, iron and other sulfate
salts. Opportunity's instrument also detected jarosite, an iron
sulfate mineral.
On Earth, such minerals would have formed in water and the
presence of jarosite suggests an acid-rich lake or hot springs
environment, scientists said.
John Grotzinger, a geologist from the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology in Cambridge, said the evidence of water also includes
three direct visual observations: the presence in El Capitan of
small voids, called vugs; the presence of spherules, and the
layering of the rock.
Images shows that El Capitan is pocked with .4-inch long
indentations or voids that may have once contained salt minerals.
Such voids, or vugs, form when crystals of salt minerals aggregate
within a rock sitting in salty water. Later processes cause the
crystals to disappear, leaving behind the voids within the rock.
BB-sized particles, called spherules, also formed in the rock.
These can be formed from molten droplets originating from meteor
impacts or from volcanic action, or they can precipitate from
solution inside of porous rock.
NASA scientists said that since the
spherules are randomly distributed they probably formed in water.
If they were of volcanic or impact origin, the spherules would
probably concentrate in rock layers that were exposed at the time
of those events, the researchers said in a statement.
The rock also has layers in a pattern called crossbedding that
can be formed by water or wind action, the statement said.
More study of the target rocks is planned. Officials said they
will maneuver the six-wheeled rover closer to the outcrop to get
closer, more detailed views.
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