Scientists Look at Martian Salt for Ancient Life 116
eldavojohn writes "Is there life on Mars? Maybe not, but a better question might be whether or not it has ever existed on Mars? Scientists are claiming that the best indication for this will be in newly found evaporated salt deposits on Mars which they can use to check for cellulose. Here on earth, tiny fuzzy fibers have been found in salt dating back almost 250 million years making it the oldest known evidence of life on earth. Jack Griffith, a microbiologist from UNC, is quoted as saying, 'Cellulose was one of the earliest polymers organisms made during their evolution, so it pops out as the most likely thing you'd find on Mars, if you found anything at all. Looking for it in salt deposits is probably a very good way to go.'"
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Wow, I guess we have our answer. The Mods REALLY hate the Dead Milkmen.
The lesson is learned. One must contain their pop-culture references to the approved Linux, Star Trek, Star Wars, Simpsons, South Park and Zero Wing canon. All else is anathema and must be labeled "Flamebait" so as to not taint the /. culture. If one questions this, one will get further modded Offtopic. By all means, don't fail to disappoint. Do your part and mod this down right away!
Thanks for the reference (Score:1)
2) I think the problem with your theory is that it was already (at least partially) flamebait in the original context. Flamebait is flamebait, even if it has a pop-cultural basis.
3) "The Mods REALLY hate the Dead Milkmen." => You ignore Hanlon's Razor [wikipedia.org].
4) Even insightful, informative comments which are unconnected to the topic of the article are fair game for Offtopic mods. That would, of course, include this comment.
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1) Thanks for the reference, I'd always wondered about that. What song is it from?
It's called Stuart [deadmilkmen.com].
2) I think the problem with your theory is that it was already (at least partially) flamebait in the original context. Flamebait is flamebait, even if it has a pop-cultural basis.
No, it was +5 funny in its ORIGINAL context. The song (a story really) was meant to be funny, like all their other songs. If you want anti-flamer flamebait try some Republican party speeches.
3) "The Mods REALLY hate the Dead Mi
Salt and astrobiology (Score:5, Informative)
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Wait, wait, was your article about the implications of Martian salt for the science of astrobiology? Or the implications of Martian salt for the publication Astrobiology?
Inquiring minds want to know!
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Cellulose *variants*? (Score:1)
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Knock! Knock! Who was there? (Score:1)
The salt people who?
The salt people who left this solar system eons ago!
Look for the Margarita glasses (Score:2, Funny)
slightly inaccurate summary (Score:5, Interesting)
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Why? It's basically just a functions of the number of decays that have taken place and the number of atoms left of the original. Before 500 years the small number of decays makes the process inaccurate and after 50,000 counting the atoms remaining becomes difficult.
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Can someone Mod the parent post up?
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http://talkorigins.org/faqs/faq-age-of-earth.html [talkorigins.org]
In fact, I suggest you probably spend some time at that site.
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Ah, but rock's not made out of atoms --- it's made out of molecules. The molecules only work properly if they're made up of the right combination of atoms. Let's say that the environment the rock's formed in contains Foonium. Foonium is unstable and decays into Barnium, which is stable. They're chemically differ
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stromatolite (Score:4, Informative)
Quote:
"The earliest stromatolite of confirmed microbial origin dates to 2,724 million years ago."
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Return Sample? (Score:5, Informative)
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I hope not. The possibility that it may contaminate Earth with a Mars infection we have no immunity for is too high. Even a 1-in-a-million chance is not worth it. Would you want to take a 1-to-million gamble with all of humanity? (Please, no G.W.Bush jokes). We'd probably need to set up an orbiting or moon base lab for that so that any infected workers are incubated away from Earth for at lea
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The odds of finding a living, viable, martian disease that likes people are about the same as finding a herd of giraffes roaming around up there.
Re:Return Sample? (Score:5, Insightful)
1. We don't know that with any certainty. It may end up being a "contest" to see which side can evolve an advantage over the other first before immunities are built up by both sides.
2. Mars life may be related. Studies suggest asteroids can blast spores betweens planets.
It's still pretty rare that diseases jump species here
But species jumpers also tend to be some of the deadliest. Livestock are notorious for producing whoppers.
Re:Return Sample? (Score:4, Interesting)
None of that applies to a theoretical martian virus that's got no growth vector and no suitable host animal that it's evolved to live in, that we like to hang out with. It would have to have us nailed the first time, no tests, no practice. That's pretty damn unlikely.
The asteroid thing is of course possible, but again pretty unlikely. In that scenario, it'd be more likely that we've already been infected with martian bacteria and have built up immunity than it is that our whole ecosystem is parallel to theirs, and their theoretical hostile bacteria are out there now, waiting.
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It may start out in say the antarctic, but spread (evolve) to other environments over time fairly quickly because it has no natural enemies yet. It's similar to invasive species that beat out the native ones and become pests (like rabbits in Australia or the loud tree frogs in Hawaii). Its not that the invasive species is necessarily "bette
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If there was a common ancestor between life on Earth and some hypothetical Martian life, that common ancestor would likely date back over three billion years ago, which
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Most living things on earth eat organic proteins and to a lessor extent sugars. It is somewhat likely that predatorial Mars life does the same. At least we cannot bet our safety on certainty it is different. "Probably" does not cut it.
If there was a common ancestor between life on Earth and some hypothetical Martian life
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You'll forgive us for ignoring you, it's the only sane response.
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How do you know they are non-existent?
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You can say that with a million-to-one certainty? I don't think so. That is being overoptimistic about human science. Even our top theories are not that strong.
We couldn't even prevent the housing bubble even though it was partially forcasted by many. You are going to trust human life to the same buerocrats? Please no!
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Spell checkers have a hard time finding that one for some reason. I don't understand why they don't add Soundex to their algorithms.
In response to your real question -- you know how the word "theory" means different things to politicians and scientists?
It does not matter. Politicians make the final decision, not scientists.
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You've been watching too much sci-fi...It's unlikely that something from such a wildly different evolutionary line would even be infectious to us. It's still pretty rare that diseases jump species here and everything on Earth is pretty closely related, genetically speaking.
Don't bother with that-- if Martian organisms are halophilic, they could not survive in a salt concentration as low as that in our bloodstream, or our oceans; they would literally fall apart.
...and if they're not halophilic, they wouldn't survive on Mars.
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I agree with your sentiment about gambling with the lives of all of humankind, but is there any evidence to suggest that 1:1000000 are reasonable odds given:
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Personally, if I was going to design an assay for material of biological origin I would use the properties of chirality. All complex biological molecules have a handedness. Organic molecules of abiotic origin are a "r
250 million? (Score:3, Insightful)
Earth cellular life evidence dates back to about 4 billion years if I remember correctly. Even some trilobite fossils date to around 530 million years ago. Perhaps they meant "250 million years since the formation of Earth"? Its a trick to make me RTFA to find out what they really meant.
No, not oldest evidence of life (Score:4, Informative)
250 million years (Score:1)
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oldest known evidence of life on earth? (Score:2)
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I imagine it is possible that in certain reactions, certain isot
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The gist of it, as I recall, is that heavier isotopes react more sluggishly than lighter ones.
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Bad Summary (Score:5, Informative)
What the article actually *says*, is that the fibers themselves are 250 million years old, making them the oldest known biologically-produced material. There's obviously older evidence of life to be found on Earth.
While I'm nitpicking, "Earth" is capitalized, as it is a proper name.
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I don't think that's quite accurate either. Certainly banded iron formations predate all of this by a couple of billion years. I guess cellulose may be the oldest surviving organic materials, but the evidence of life leaving behind different materials is much older than that.
If there is life on mars... (Score:2)
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Religion has survived much more "dangerous" things than finding evidence that there used to be bacteria on Mars. I would imagine they will say something along the lines of "It is the glory of God to conceal a thing: but the honour of kings is to search out a matter."
Or it could be anywhere in between. We have no idea what
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Most religions don't really address that. But if they find life and it's not [fill in the blank sect], then its "of the devil" and will probably be zapped.
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I doubt we are alone. The real question is, are we alone with regard to how we have evolved with regards to intelligence and communication. After all, life on a distant planet is nothing but a small curiosity for scientific
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I don't understand this statement, please explain. I'm an atheist and I can't imagine why it would be troubling.
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Slug! (Score:3, Funny)
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Cellulose is not the earliest evidence for life. (Score:1)
Stromatolites are living, layered structures formed in shallow waters by a combination of microbial biofilms -- usually of blue-green algae -- and granular deposits. They are rare today but for about 2 billion years, following their arrival in the fossil record 3.5 billion years ago, they are the main evidence of life on Earth. Modern stromatolites still look like their fossilized forebears. But are the modern microbes remnants of ancient ecosystems or just latecomers following a similar lifestyle? A metagenomic study of the bacteriophage communities in modern stromatolites and thrombolites (like stromatolites but with an irregular internal structure) shows that stromatolite-associated phages are very different from each other and from any other ecosystem studied so far. This finding strengthens the hypothesis that modern stromatolites are remnants of ancient ecosystems.
Why? (Score:3, Insightful)
If they found cellulose, I'd argue that it is from organisms that originated on earth. Now if they found (micro)fossils that are completely different from anything we know I'd listen up.
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Now, of course, if life is silicon based, then you're right, you would have an
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We don't know (Score:2)
Well ... (Score:2)
The real reason (Score:1)
that's not the reason... (Score:3, Insightful)
The real reason we want to explore Mars?
Because we can
or, a variant after my favorite mountaineer (after the late Edmund Hillary):
Because it's there
Stopping us from dreaming will make humanity dull and suicidal. Even though none of us might actually come to live the day that humans walk on the surface of Mars, doesn't mean that it is wrong to dream about it and start planning humanities future today.
Don't hide in your house from wonderful things that
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Because we can
No you can't. It's millions of miles away. It's technologically possible to fire off an expensive rocket (hey, shit! it's not your money), but it's impossible to explore the place. The reports returned from the very expensive rockets that have been sent there indicate that the place is a dead dusty dry place. If it were 10,000 kilometers away from where you lived on earth, you wouldn't have any
Re:that's not the reason... (Score:5, Insightful)
Well, it's a damned good thing the Queen of Spain didn't think like you.
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We *are* exploring Mars and we have been doing so for a long time already.
Check your tax return this year and see how much money you paid into extraterrestrial research. You'll be surprised.
"To talk about space exploration and ignore real problems is to talk like a thief and a fool."
I guess all little boys who want to be astronauts on this world are thieves?
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Because we can
So, to put this another way, the best reason we can come up with for exploring Mars is the exact same one that dogs use to lick their balls?
Re:So what else is new? No life on Mars. (Score:4, Insightful)
None of these, of course, are actually lifeless.
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None of these, of course, are actually lifeless.
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Please be more specific about which of my many reasonable and rational statements you consider to be 'moronic'.
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Well, excuse me... I'm not polishing my doctorate thesis here. I'm typing Slashdot comments.
I said that the extereme regions of desert on the earth are essentially lifeless. What I meant is not that they don't have the occasional blade of grass or microscopic bug clinging to existence in a brutal environment. I meant that these places can't support human life. Which is the only type of life (if you are a h
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If the mars polar caps do contain water ice a human community on Mars is possible.
A self-sustaining h
They can't support human life (Score:2)
A human community on Mars could never be self-sustaining.
is necessary to avoid probable pandemics, asteroid impacts, or other situations that would have extreme adverse effects on Earth-based population.
These problems haven't destroyed human life on Earth in 50,000 years. They would destroy human life on Mars within months.
Therefore this research is in the public interest,
Any research could be called public interest by this vague definition