[meteorite-list] Martian Meteorite Not Evidence of Extraterrestrials, Scientists Say

From: JoshuaTreeMuseum <joshuatreemuseum_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Fri, 3 Dec 2010 01:50:28 -0500
Message-ID: <30F5768334F94F98AE6730BE30C13E65_at_ET>

Not only is there no evidence of life on the surface of Mars, there's also
no evidence in Martian meteorites:

http://www.space.com/scienceastronomy/mars-meteorite-extraterrestrial-life-atmosphere-101201.html


      Martian Meteorite Not Evidence of Extraterrestrials, Scientists Say
      By Charles Q. Choi
      SPACE.com Contributor
      posted: 02 December 2010
      09:30 am ET


What some argue is evidence of ancient life in a meteorite from Mars could
have a simple chemical explanation, scientists now suggest.

These findings could also shed light on of the tricky chemistry going on in
the atmospheres of both Mars and Earth.

Impacting space rocks on Mars over the years have hurled debris off the
planet, some of which has landed on Earth. One such rock - the 3.9
billion-year-old meteorite known as ALH84001 - had globular, micron-sized
carbonate particles seemingly arranged in chains that some thought must have
been made by ancient Martian life.

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form carbonates on Earth without interference from biological organisms.
They suggest this process likely takes place on Mars as well.

Unusual oxygen type

The carbonates seen in ALH84001 possessed unusually high levels of the
isotope oxygen-17. (An oxygen atom has eight protons in its nucleus, and
while most of these also have eight neutrons, oxygen-17 has nine.)

Atmospheric chemist Robina Shaheen at the University of California at San
Diego discovered anomalously high levels of oxygen-17 in carbonates found on
dust grains, aerosols and dirt on Earth as well. This hinted that a chemical
process common to both planets might be at work.

Shaheen calculated that ozone in the atmosphere could interact with
oxygen-bearing mineral aerosols from dust and other sources to form hydrogen
peroxide and carbonates possessing this same oxygen-isotope anomaly. "What
she found is that the tiny little layer on the outside of the grain is where
this chemistry all happens," said researcher Mark Thiemens, a planetary
scientist at the University of California at San Diego.

Shaheen's analysis of the carbonates in ALH84001 suggested they could have
been formed on aerosols in the ancient Martian atmosphere. NASA's Phoenix
lander recently detected carbonates linked with particulates in the dusty
atmosphere of Mars. "We think it might be this same mechanism that is
operating," she said.

Although the researchers think the carbonate particles seen in ALH84001 are
probably not biological in origin, "that doesn't mean that life is
impossible on Mars," Thiemens cautioned.

This chemical process might not only shed light on the past and present of
Mars, but it could also do the same for our planet as well. For instance,
current models of atmospheric processes on Earth assume that the mixing of
large volumes of gases drives the chemistry of the Earth's atmosphere. This
new work might force a rethinking of this idea, scientists said, especially
as the Earth's atmosphere becomes warmer and dustier due to climate change,
providing more opportunities for this kind of chemistry to take place on
aerosols.

"The chemical transformations aerosols can undergo could make them seeds for
cloud formation when before we thought they could not, which has huge
implications regarding the water cycle and probabilities of rain," Shaheen
told SPACE.com.

Window into Earth's past

Scientists could also peer into Earth's atmosphere as it was in the past,
particularly its oxygen levels, by examining carbonates found in rocks that
are hundreds of millions of years old, researchers said. This could provide
a window to early Earth far beyond the 60,000 years or so back that
scientists can now study via ice core samples.

"We've found a new way to measure the earth's atmosphere for time periods
when we previously could not do it," Thiemens said. "What happened to ozone
and oxygen levels 65 million years ago during the Cretaceous-Tertiary period
when the dinosaurs and many other forms of life were killed in a mass
extinction? Who died first? Did the food chain disappear before the
dinosaurs? What happened 251 million years ago during the Permian-Triassic
period, the most severe extinction of life on Earth, when 85 percent of life
disappeared and no one knows why? There's no record of what happened in the
atmosphere. But if you can find a record of what happened to oxygen levels,
you can answer questions like that."

Ancient carbonate might even shed light on the origins of complex life,
Thiemens said.

"If you want to understand the origin and evolution of complex life, oxygen
is your number one culprit," Thiemens told SPACE.com. "The most interesting
time carbonates might be able to look at would be about 500 million years
ago, back when the Earth was frozen solid. Prior to that time, there's no
life except algae and bacteria. After that, all this life that depends on
oxygen appears, and how that happened is something that's still uncertain."

Shaheen, Thiemens and their colleagues detailed their findings online Nov. 8
in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

--------------------------

 I was reading the dictionary, I thought it was a poem about everything.
(SW)

Phil Whitmer
Received on Fri 03 Dec 2010 01:50:28 AM PST


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