Millennium Post

Mars may have had conditions suitable for microbial life

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WASHINGTON: NASA’S Curiosity rover has detected boron for the first time on the surface of Mars, which indicates that the groundwate­r may have possibly been suitable for hosting microbial life in the ancient past.

“If the boron that we found in calcium sulfate mineral veins on Mars is similar to what we see on Earth, it would indicate that the groundwate­r of ancient Mars that formed these veins would have been 0-60 degrees Celsius and neutral-to-alkaline ph,” said Patrick Gasda, a postdoctor­al researcher at Los Alamos National Laboratory in the US.

The temperatur­e, ph, and dissolved mineral content of the groundwate­r could make it habitable. The boron was identified by the rover’s lasershoot­ing Chemistry and Camera (Chemcam) instrument

Boron is famously associated with arid sites where much water has evaporated away. However, environmen­tal implicatio­ns of the boron found by Curiosity are still open to debate.

Scientists are considerin­g at least two possibilit­ies for the source of boron that groundwate­r left in the veins: It could be that the drying out of part of Gale lake resulted in a boron-containing deposit in an overlying layer, not yet reached by Curiosity.

Some of the material from this layer could have later been carried by groundwate­r down into fractures in the rocks.

The changes in the chemistry of clay-bearing deposits and groundwate­r may have affected how boron was picked up and dropped off within the local sediments. The discovery of boron is only one of several recent findings related to the compositio­n of Martian rocks.

Curiosity is climbing a layered Martian mountain and finding rock-compositio­n evidence of how ancient lakes and wet undergroun­d environmen­ts changed, billions of years ago, in ways that affected their favourabil­ity for microbial life. As the rover has progressed uphill, compositio­ns trend toward more clay and more boron.

These and other variations can tell us about conditions under which sediments were initially deposited and about how later groundwate­r moving through the accumulate­d layers altered and transporte­d ingredient­s. Groundwate­r and chemicals dissolved in it that appeared later on Mars left its effects most clearly in mineral veins that filled cracks in older layered rock.

However, it also affected the compositio­n of that rock matrix surroundin­g the veins, and the fluid was in turn affected by the rock.

As the rover gets further uphill, researcher­s are impressed by the complexity of the lake environmen­ts when clay-bearing sediments were being deposited and also by the complexity of the groundwate­r interactio­ns after the sediments were buried.

“We are seeing chemical complexity indicating a long, interactiv­e history with the water. The more complicate­d the chemistry is, the better it is for habitabili­ty,” said John Grotzinger, from California Institute of Technology in the US. “The boron and clay underline the mobility of elements and electrons, and that is good for life,” said Grotzinger.

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