Mars- Water of Life?
By Sean Henahan, Access Excellence
Pasadena, CA (12/5/97) While the Pathfinder mission contributed
significant evidence in support of previous life-supporting water
on Mars, the evidence for fossil remains on the Martian meteor ALH84001
remains controversial.
After
landing on Mars on July 4th of this year, the Mars Pathfinder (named the
Sagan Memorial Station) returned an incredible 1.2 gigabits of data, which
included 9669 lander and 384 rover images and about 4 million temperature,
pressure, and wind measurements. Newly published studies based on the chemical
analyses returned by Pathfinder indicate that some rocks on the red planet
may be high in silica, implying differentiated parent materials. This,
along with the presence of rounded pebbles and cobbles and a possible conglomerate,
suggest fluvial processes that imply liquid water in equilibrium with the
atmosphere.
Caption: Science
publishes the first peer-reviewed data from the Pathfinder mission to Mars.
Image processed
at Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, CA
"Taken together, the data compiled so far from Pathfinder all appear
to be consistent with a water-rich planet that may be more Earth-like than
previously recognized," say JPL researchers, "with a warmer and wetter
past in which liquid water was stable and the atmosphere was thicker."
Doppler and range data gathered by Pathfinder's radio communications
system to determine the rate of rotation of the Red Planet and the wobble
in the axis of rotation also suggest a more Earth-like planet than previously
suspected. These data indicate that Mars has an iron-rich core of
about 1,300 to 2,000 kilometers in radius that is much denser than the
surrounding mantle- similar to Earth's interior. Further analyses allowed
the researchers to determine the likely Martian climate over the past millions
of years. They report that the evidence is "in good agreement" with a model
in which a mass amount of carbon dioxide shifts seasonally between the
atmosphere and the planet's polar ice caps.
The Pathfinder landed in what appeared to be a huge, dry flood plain.
The Sojourner rover was able to provide a detailed geologic report from
the site. The rover dug up samples for examination and estimated the mechanical
properties of the deposits. The rover reported the presence of numerous
well-rounded pebbles that may be sedimentary--indicative of wind, water
or a glacier--rather than volcanic in origin. Surface pebbles may have
been rounded by flood waters at the site, or liberated from larger sedimentary
rocks (called conglomerates) by weathering.
"The possible discovery of a conglomerate on the martian surface is
intriguing and would require some rethinking of the weathering processes
on Mars. Conglomerates imply that water existed elsewhere and earlier than
the suspected flood that carved out the valley in which Pathfinder landed,"
the researchers note.
MARTIAN METEORITE CONTAINS NO BIOLOGICAL LIFE, RESEARCH TEAM SAYS
Meanwhile, another team of researchers reporting in Nature concludes
it analysis of the famous Martian meteorite, ALH84001, with the claim that
the rock contains no biological life forms.
ALH84001 is a small meteorite that landed on Antarctica some 15 million
years ago. Last
year, a team of researchers at NASA's Johnson Space Center claimed
to have identified organic compounds on the Martian meteorite, the first
ever such discovery. The controversy has swung back and forth ever since.
In the latest study, a team of researchers from Case Western Reserve
University, the Georgia Institute of Technology and the University of Tennessee
duplicated the methods of a NASA team, but reached far different conclusions.
The team reports that most of the purported nanofossils or "worm-like images"
are nothing more than lamellae, or fractured surfaces of pyroxene and carbonate
crystals.
In the first study, which used transmission electron microscope imagining
(TEM), the researchers found non-biological magnetite whiskers on or near
the surfaces of the carbonates. Superficially the whiskers look like worms,
but in fact they have nothing to do with biological processes, according
to Ralph Harvey, senior research associate in the Department of Geological
Sciences, Case Western University. Harvey headed the team that found
the meteorite in the 1984.
The latest study took place over the past six months as the researchers
re-examined the meteorite using the new techniques. This time they found
yet another population of worm-like forms that are actually mineral lamellae
formed by non-biological, geological processes. The lamellae look like
worms or nanofossils, but when the specimen is tilted and viewed from another
angle, it clearly shows that the lamellae are attached and part of the
mineral surfaces.
"Peculiar surface structures or segmentation on the worm-like forms
are artifacts from conductive metal coatings applied to the samples for
imaging in the electron microscope. This is not the first time metal coating
artifacts have lead to misidentification of nanofossils in rocks,"
said John Bradley, of the School of Material Science and Engineering at
Georgia Institute of Technology.
"We have now found two different types of mineral forms in ALH84001
that look just like nanofossils, but they are strictly non-biological origins.
Sometimes even nature has a perverse sense of humor," he added.
This latest study is not likely to end the debate. In a rare counterpoint
article, the original NASA team responds to the group's findings, disagreeing
with its conclusions. They claim to have identified different structures
than those reported in the newer analysis.
The Pathfinder data appears in a series of articles in the Dec.5, 1997
issue of Science. The meteorite research appears in the Dec. 4, 1997 issue
of Nature.
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