Taranaki Daily News

Mars rover will look for signs of life on ancient crater lake

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In a search for ancient life on Mars, Nasa will send its next rover to explore Jezero Crater – the site of a former delta and lake.

The rover, which is scheduled to launch in 2020, is equipped with a drilling system that can collect and store rock samples that contain clues to Mars’s ancient past. Once the samples are cached, Nasa hopes to send follow-up missions to retrieve the samples and return them to Earth.

‘‘Getting samples from this lake-delta system will revolution- ise how we think about Mars and its ability to harbor life,’’ said Thomas Zurbuchen, Nasa’s associate administra­tor for science.

The landing site selection came after years of research and days of fierce debate over the best spot to look for evidence of ancient life on an alien world. Among the alternativ­es being considered were Columbia Hills, an ancient hot spring that was explored by the now-defunct rover Spirit, and Northeast Syrtis, a network of ancient

mesas that may have harbored undergroun­d water.

Ultimately, Zurbuchen said, Jezero was selected for the diversity of its terrain. Each type of rock at the site – from clays that could preserve signs of ancient organisms to volcanic rocks that hint at Mars’s planetary evolution – should help the rover achieve its two main science goals. First, to determine what the Red Planet’s environmen­t was like deep in the past. And second,

to figure out if life ever got going there.

Results from past missions have revealed that Mars was not always the desolate desert world we see today. Dormant volcanoes suggest it once boasted intense volcanic activity.

And landforms like the driedup delta at Jezero Crater demonstrat­e that liquid water existed on the surface – which means Mars may have had a thicker atmosphere to keep the water from boiling

away.

This new view of Mars resembles what is known about early Earth.

And scientists know microbial life began here as early as 4 billion years ago.

If it happened here, why not there?

Jezero Crater is the best place on Mars to probe that question, said Tim Goudge, a geologist at the University of Texas who is one of the leading advocates for

the site. Deltas are beloved by scientists because of the way they gather sediments from across a watershed and deposit them in layers, which eventually harden into rock. Many of the most ancient fossils found on Earth come from this kind of environmen­t.

If a microbe ever swam in Mars’s waterways, its organic remains may still be buried in the mudstones along the rim of Jezero Crater.

 ?? NASA/JPL-CALTECH ?? An artist rendering depicts Nasa’s Mars 2020 rover, with its robotic arm extended.
NASA/JPL-CALTECH An artist rendering depicts Nasa’s Mars 2020 rover, with its robotic arm extended.
 ?? NASA/JPL/JHUAPL/MSSS/BROWN UNIVERSITY ?? Jezero crater holds a fossil river delta, which may have concentrat­ed and preserved signs of life.
NASA/JPL/JHUAPL/MSSS/BROWN UNIVERSITY Jezero crater holds a fossil river delta, which may have concentrat­ed and preserved signs of life.

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