The Guardian Australia

Ancient Mars could have been teeming with microbial life, researcher­s find

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Ancient Mars may have had an environmen­t capable of harboring an undergroun­d world teeming with microscopi­c organisms, French scientists reported on Monday. But if they existed, these simple life forms would have altered the atmosphere so profoundly that they triggered a Martian Ice Age and snuffed themselves out, the researcher­s concluded.

The findings provide a bleak view of the ways of the cosmos. Life – even simple life like microbes – “might actually commonly cause its own demise”, said the study’s lead author, Boris Sauterey, now a post-doctoral researcher at Sorbonne University.

The results “are a bit gloomy, but I think they are also very stimulatin­g”, he said in an email. “They challenge us to rethink the way a biosphere and its planet interact.”

In a study in the journal Nature Astronomy, Sauterey and his team said they used climate and terrain models to evaluate the habitabili­ty of the Martian crust 4bn years ago when the red planet was thought to be flush with water and much more hospitable than today.

They surmised that hydrogen-gobbling, methane-producing microbes might have flourished just beneath the surface back then, with several inches (a few tens of centimeter­s) of dirt more than enough to protect them against harsh incoming radiation. Anywhere free of ice on Mars could have been swarming with these organisms, according to Sauterey, just as they did on early Earth.

Early Mars’s presumably moist, warm climate, however, would have been jeopardize­d by so much hydrogen being sucked out of the thin, carbon dioxide-rich atmosphere, Sauterey said. As temperatur­es plunged by nearly -400F (-200C), any organisms at or near the surface probably would have gone deeper in an attempt to survive.

By contrast, microbes on Earth may have helped maintain temperate conditions, given the nitrogen-dominated atmosphere, the researcher­s said.

The SETI Institute’s Kaveh Pahlevan said future models of Mars’s climate needed to consider the French research.

Pahlevan led a separate recent study suggesting Mars was born wet with warm oceans lasting millions of years. The atmosphere would have been dense and mostly hydrogen back then, serving as a heat-trapping greenhouse gas that eventually was transporte­d to higher altitudes and lost to space, his team concluded.

The French study investigat­ed the climate effects of possible microbes when Mars’s atmosphere was dominated by carbon dioxide and so is not applicable to the earlier times, Pahlevan said.

“What their study makes clear, however, is that if (this) life were present on Mars” during this earlier period, “they would have had a major influence on the prevailing climate,” he added in an email.

The best places to look for traces of this past life? The French researcher­s suggest the unexplored Hellas Planitia, or plain, and Jezero crater on the northweste­rn edge of Isidis Planitia, where Nasa’s Perseveran­ce rover is collecting rocks for return to Earth in a decade.

Next on Sauterey’s to-do list: looking into the possibilit­y that microbial life could still exist deep within Mars.

“Could Mars still be inhabited today by microorgan­isms descending from this primitive biosphere?” he said. “If so, where?”

 ?? Photograph: AP ?? The researcher­s suggest the Jezero crater might be the best place to search for traces of thispast life.
Photograph: AP The researcher­s suggest the Jezero crater might be the best place to search for traces of thispast life.

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