Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. Space Travel News .




MARSDAILY
Mars-like Places on Earth Give Insights into Rover Data
by Staff Writers
Paris, France (SPX) Sep 27, 2012


Over the past 4 years, the team has carried out field trips to Chott el Jerid, a salt pan in Tunisia, the Atacama desert in Chile, Rio Tinto in Southern Spain and Deception Island in Antarctica.

Life thrives on Planet Earth. In even the most inhospitable places - the freezing Antarctic permafrost, Sun-baked salt pans in Tunisia or the corrosively acidic Rio Tinto in Spain - pockets of life can be found.

Some of these locations have much in common with environments found on Mars, as discovered by orbiters and rovers exploring the surface. Researchers from the Centro de Astrobiologia (CAB) in Madrid have made a series of field trips to the most Mars-like places on Earth. On Wednesday they presented some of their findings during a press conference at the European Planetary Science Congress in Madrid.

Dr. Felipe Gomez, the project leader said, "The big questions are: what is life, how can we define it and what are the requirements for supporting life? To understand the results we receive back from missions like Curiosity, we need to have detailed knowledge of similar environments on Earth. Metabolic diversity on Earth is huge.

In the field campaigns, we have studied ecosystems in situ and we have also brought samples back to the laboratory for further analysis. We have found a range of complex chemical processes that allow life to survive in unexpected places."

Over the past 4 years, the team has carried out field trips to Chott el Jerid, a salt pan in Tunisia, the Atacama desert in Chile, Rio Tinto in Southern Spain and Deception Island in Antarctica.

Chott El Jerid and Atacama
Gomez and his colleagues visited Chott el Jerid salt pan 3 times between 2010 and 2012 and Atacama desert in 2010. The team set up weather stations at a series of locations at each site.

The weather stations measured surface and air temperatures, humidity, ultraviolet radiation levels, wind direction and velocity. The data collected from these field campaigns is comparable to the data now being collected by the Remote Meteorological Monitoring Station (REMS) carried by Curiosity, which was built by a team from CAB-INTA.

"We studied measurements in different locations over several daily cycles. As well as the large-scale changes to all the parameters through the day, we observed a small rise in the surface temperature after dusk.

"We found that this is caused by water condensing on the surface and hydrating salts, which releases heat in an exothermic reaction. This is very interesting from the perspective of the REMS instrument on Curiosity - it gives us a way to follow when liquid water might be present on the surface," said Gomez.

Cloud cover in the sky could also be tracked through fluctuations in measurements of the solar radiation and luminosity (ultraviolet flux variations).

"The correlations we've found between these parameters and cloud cover means that we can use Mars orbiter measurements of cloud conditions to give us an indication of changes that are going on at the surface," said Gomez.

The team used probes to study the electrical properties of the soil. By studying changes in resistivity with depth, they were able to identify different materials underground and the water-content. By setting up crisscrossing 'transepts' of resistivity probes, the teams were able to build up a 3-dimensional picture of the structure of the subsurface.

They also drilled samples to a depth of 3.6 meters in Chott El Jerid and to 6 meters in Atacama. The core samples showed subsurface ecosystems of completely different kinds of bacteria from those found on the surface.

The populations of bacteria found at the surface decreased with depth, but there was an increase in archaea, and also single-celled halophilic organisms that are able to oxidize metabolites under aerobic and anaerobic conditions.

"In both Atacama and Chott El Jerid, we found ecosystems at a depth of a few meters that were completely isolated from the surface," said Gomez.

The surface of Chott El Jerid salt pan is very pure sodium chloride with traces of other salts. The team found small accumulations of organic matter inside the salt crystals. When they analyzed the samples, they found that these were populations of halophilic, salt-loving bacteria that were dormant.

Gomez said, "This was a really exciting find. These condensed accumulations of halophilic bacteria could have been dormant for possibly hundreds of years. Back in the laboratory, we were able to rehydrate the samples and restore the bacteria to life."

Rio Tinto
The Mars Exploration Rover, Opportunity, discovered jarosite on the surface of Mars. Jarosite is only synthesized in the presence of water and contains very high concentrations of metals, such as iron. The team studied outcrops of jarosite at Rio Tinto, areas that have extraordinarily high levels of acidity.

Unexpectedly, they found photosynthetic bacteria growing between the layers in salt crusts. When they analyzed the bacteria back in the laboratory, they made a further discovery: that iron appears to protect the bacteria from ultraviolet radiation.

Gomez explains, "We took two samples of the bacteria, one with iron present and one without and exposed them to high levels of ultraviolet radiation. For the sample without iron, nearly all the bacteria were destroyed.

"For the sample with iron present the population survived. There was a small increase due to toxic super-oxides being created, but the protective effect of ferric compounds was significant."

Their findings have implications for the development of life on the Earth: early in its formation, the Earth had no oxygen and its atmosphere would not have given the protection from ultraviolet radiation that it provides today.

"What the bacteria we found in Rio Tinto show is that the presence of ferric compounds can actually protect life. This could mean that life formed earlier on Earth than we thought. These effects are also relevant for the formation of life on the surface of Mars," says Gomez.

The team also found that salt provides stable conditions that can allow life to survive in very hard environments.

"Within salts, the temperature and humidity are protected from fluctuations and the doses of ultraviolet radiation are very low," explained Gomez. "In the laboratory, we placed populations of different bacteria between layers of salt a few millimeters thick and exposed them to Martian conditions.

Nearly 100% of deinoccocus radiodurans , a hardy type of bacteria, survived being irradiated. But fascinatingly, about 40% of acidithiobacillus ferrooxidans - a very fragile variety of bacteria, also survived when protected by a salt crust."

.


Related Links
Euro Planet
Mars News and Information at MarsDaily.com
Lunar Dreams and more






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








MARSDAILY
Curiosity Finishes Close Inspection of Rock Target
Pasadena CA (JPL) Sep 27, 2012
NASA's rover Curiosity touched a Martian rock with its robotic arm for the first time on Sept. 22, assessing what chemical elements are in the rock called "Jake Matijevic." After a short drive the preceding day to get within arm's reach of the football-size rock, Curiosity put its Alpha Particle X-Ray Spectrometer (APXS) instrument in contact with the rock during the rover's 46th Martian d ... read more


MARSDAILY
California Governor Signs the Spaceflight Liability and Immunity Act

Processing is underway with the next Automated Transfer Vehicle to be orbited by Arianespace

Fueling underway with the Galileo satellites for next Soyuz launch from French Guiana

SpaceX, NASA Target Oct. 7 Launch For Resupply Mission To Space Station

MARSDAILY
Mars-like Places on Earth Give Insights into Rover Data

A windshield wiper for Mars dust

Curiosity Finishes Close Inspection of Rock Target

Where is Deimos?

MARSDAILY
China has no timetable for manned moon landing

Senior scientist discusses China's lunar orbiter challenges

NASA sees 'gateway' for space missions

Protection for Moon, Mars astronauts eyed

MARSDAILY
Sharpest-ever Ground-based Images of Pluto and Charon: Proves a Powerful Tool for Exoplanet Discoveries

The Kuiper Belt at 20: Paradigm Changes in Our Knowledge of the Solar System

e2v To Supply Large CMOS Imaging Sensors For Imaging Kuiper Belt Objects

Fly New Horizons through the Kuiper Belt

MARSDAILY
Stagnant Interiors Suppress Chances of Life on Super-Earths

Meteors Might Add Methane to Exoplanet Atmospheres

Two 'hot Jupiters' found in star cluster: NASA

Planets Can Form in the Galactic Center

MARSDAILY
ORBITEC Has Real "Vision" For Its New AUSEP Rocket Engine

NASA Selects Space Launch System Advanced Development Proposals

Space formula of Konstantin Tsiolkovsky

XCOR Announces FiberDyne as Lynx Mark I Wing Strake Manufacturer

MARSDAILY
China Spacesat gets 18-million-USD gov't support

Tiangong Orbit Change Signals Likely Date for Shenzhou 10

China Focus: Timeline for China's space research revealed

China eyes next lunar landing as US scales back

MARSDAILY
Mysterious Case of Asteroid Oljato's Magnetic Disturbance

Asteroid's Troughs Suggest Stunted Planet

Russia, Belarus astronomers discover brightest comet

Dawn: Vesta Got Special Delivery of Hydrated Minerals




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement