Hindustan Times (Noida)

Mars rocks support case for ancient life: Nasa

- Agence France-presse letters@hindustant­imes.com

WASHINGTON: Nasa’s Perseveran­ce Mars rover has now collected two rock samples, with signs that they were in contact with water for a long period of time boosting the case for ancient life on the Red Planet.

“It looks like our first rocks reveal a potentiall­y habitable sustained environmen­t,” said Ken Farley, project scientist for the mission, on Friday. “It’s a big deal that the water was there for a long time.”

The six-wheeled robot collected its first sample, dubbed Montdenier on September 6, and its second, Montagnac from the same rock on September 8. Both samples, slightly wider than a pencil in diameter and about 6cm long, are now stored in sealed tubes in the rover’s interior.

A first attempt at collecting a sample in early August failed after the rock proved too crumbly to withstand Perseveran­ce’s drill. The rover has been operating in a region known as the Jezero Crater, just north of the equator and home to a lake 3.5 billion years ago, when conditions on Mars were much warmer and wetter than today.

The rock that provided the first samples was found to be basaltic in compositio­n and likely the product of lava flows.

Volcanic rocks contain crystallin­e minerals that are helpful in radiometri­c dating.

This in turn could help scientists build up a picture of the area’s geological history, such as when the crater formed, when the lake appeared and disappeare­d, and how climate changed over time. “An interestin­g thing about these rocks as well is that they show signs for sustained interactio­n with groundwate­r,” Nasa geologist Katie Stack Morgan said.

The scientists already knew the crater was home to a lake, but couldn’t rule out the possibilit­y that it had been a “flash in the pan” with floodwater­s filling up the crater for as little as 50 years. Now they are more certain groundwate­r was present for much longer.

“If these rocks experience­d water for long periods of time, there may be habitable niches within these rocks that could have supported ancient microbial life,” added Stack Morgan.

The salt minerals in the rock cores may have trapped tiny bubbles of ancient Martian water. “Salts are great minerals for preserving signs of ancient life here on Earth, and we expect the same may be true for rocks on Mars,” Stack Morgan said.

Nasa is hoping to return the samples to Earth for in depth lab analysis in a joint mission with the European Space Agency sometime in the 2030s.

 ?? AFP ?? Two holes where the Perseveran­ce rover’s drill obtained chalksize samples from the rock nicknamed Rochette.
AFP Two holes where the Perseveran­ce rover’s drill obtained chalksize samples from the rock nicknamed Rochette.

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