Author Topic: Scientists think this ancient meteorite hints at life on Mars  (Read 172 times)

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Scientists think this ancient meteorite hints at life on Mars
« on: September 15, 2014, 07:03:18 pm »
Scientists think this ancient meteorite hints at life on Mars
The Week
Meghan DeMaria  1:43pm ET



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A 1.3-billion-year-old Martian meteorite provides new evidence that there could be life on Mars.

The "cell-like" meteorite, Nakhla, once held water, researchers at the National Technical University of Athens and the University of Manchester found. The findings are published in the most recent issue of the journal Astrobiology. The Nakhla meteorite hit Earth in 1911 in Egypt, but high-resolution imaging on a feature embedded in a piece of the rock has sparked recent scientific interest.

"In many ways it resembled a fossilized biological cell from Earth, but it was intriguing, because it was undoubtedly from Mars," Ian Lyon, a professor at the University of Manchester, said in a statement. "Our research found that it probably wasn't a cell but that it did once hold water, water that had been heated, probably as a result of an asteroid impact."

The meteorite has fueled speculation that there may be life on Mars — the fact that it once held water suggests that "Mars does provide all the conditions for life to have formed and evolved," according to Phys.org. If large asteroids hit Mars in the past, they could have produced hydrothermal fields capable of sustaining life. "Life as we know it, in the form of bacteria, for example, could be there, although we haven't found it yet," Lyon said in the statement.


http://theweek.com/article/index/268163/speedreads-scientists-think-this-ancient-meteorite-hints-at-life-on-mars

 

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