This animation depicts water disappearing over
time in the Martian river valley Neretva Vallis, where NASA’s Perseverance Mars
takes the rock sample named “Sapphire Canyon” from a rock called “Cheyava
Falls,” which was found in the “Bright Angel” formation. Credit: NASA
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A sample collected by NASA’s
Perseverance Mars rover from an ancient dry riverbed in Jezero Crater could
preserve evidence of ancient microbial life. Taken from a rock named “Cheyava
Falls” last year, the sample, called “Sapphire Canyon,” contains potential
biosignatures, according to a paper published Wednesday in the journal Nature.
A potential biosignature is a substance or structure that might have a
biological origin but requires more data or further study before a conclusion
can be reached about the absence or presence of life.
“This finding by Perseverance,
launched under President Trump in his first term, is the closest we have ever
come to discovering life on Mars. The identification of a potential
biosignature on the Red Planet is a groundbreaking discovery, and one that will
advance our understanding of Mars,” said acting NASA Administrator Sean Duffy.
“NASA’s commitment to conducting Gold Standard Science will continue as we
pursue our goal of putting American boots on Mars’ rocky soil.”
Perseverance came upon Cheyava Falls in July 2024 while exploring the “Bright Angel” formation, a set of rocky
outcrops on the northern and southern edges of Neretva Vallis, an ancient river
valley measuring a quarter-mile (400 meters) wide that was carved by water
rushing into Jezero Crater long ago.
“This finding is the direct result of
NASA’s effort to strategically plan, develop, and execute a mission able to
deliver exactly this type of science — the identification of a potential
biosignature on Mars,” said Nicky Fox, associate administrator, Science Mission
Directorate at NASA Headquarters in Washington. “With the publication of this
peer-reviewed result, NASA makes this data available to the wider science
community for further study to confirm or refute its biological potential.”
The rover’s science instruments found
that the formation’s sedimentary rocks are composed of clay and silt, which, on
Earth, are excellent preservers of past microbial life. They also are rich in
organic carbon, sulfur, oxidized iron (rust), and phosphorous.
“The combination of chemical compounds
we found in the Bright Angel formation could have been a rich source of energy
for microbial metabolisms,” said Perseverance scientist Joel Hurowitz of Stony
Brook University, New York and lead author of the paper. “But just because we
saw all these compelling chemical signatures in the data didn’t mean we had a
potential biosignature. We needed to analyze what that data could mean.”
First to collect data on this rock were
Perseverance’s PIXL (Planetary
Instrument for X-ray Lithochemistry) and SHERLOC (Scanning Habitable Environments with Raman & Luminescence for
Organics & Chemicals) instruments. While investigating Cheyava Falls, an
arrowhead-shaped rock measuring 3.2 feet by 2 feet (1 meter by 0.6 meters),
they found what appeared to be colorful spots. The spots on the rock could have
been left behind by microbial life if it had used the raw ingredients, the
organic carbon, sulfur, and phosphorus, in the rock as an energy source.
In higher-resolution images, the
instruments found a distinct pattern of minerals arranged into reaction fronts
(points of contact where chemical and physical reactions occur) the team called
leopard spots. The spots carried the signature of two iron-rich minerals:
vivianite (hydrated iron phosphate) and greigite (iron sulfide). Vivianite is
frequently found on Earth in sediments, peat bogs, and around decaying organic
matter. Similarly, certain forms of microbial life on Earth can produce
greigite.
The combination of these minerals, which
appear to have formed by electron-transfer reactions between the sediment and
organic matter, is a potential fingerprint for microbial life, which would use
these reactions to produce energy for growth. The minerals also can be
generated abiotically, or without the presence of life. Hence, there are ways
to produce them without biological reactions, including sustained high
temperatures, acidic conditions, and binding by organic compounds. However, the
rocks at Bright Angel do not show evidence that they experienced high
temperatures or acidic conditions, and it is unknown whether the organic
compounds present would’ve been capable of catalyzing the reaction at low
temperatures.
The discovery was particularly
surprising because it involves some of the youngest sedimentary rocks the
mission has investigated. An earlier hypothesis assumed signs of ancient life
would be confined to older rock formations. This finding suggests that Mars
could have been habitable for a longer period or later in the planet’s history
than previously thought, and that older rocks also might hold signs of life
that are simply harder to detect.
“Astrobiological claims, particularly
those related to the potential discovery of past extraterrestrial life, require
extraordinary evidence,” said Katie Stack Morgan, Perseverance’s project
scientist at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California. “Getting
such a significant finding as a potential biosignature on Mars into a
peer-reviewed publication is a crucial step in the scientific process because
it ensures the rigor, validity, and significance of our results. And while
abiotic explanations for what we see at Bright Angel are less likely given the
paper’s findings, we cannot rule them out.”
The scientific community uses tools and
frameworks like the CoLD scale and Standards of Evidence to assess whether data related to the search for life actually
answers the question, Are we alone? Such tools help improve understanding
of how much confidence to place in data suggesting a possible signal of life
found outside our own planet.
Marked by seven benchmarks, the Confidence of Life
Detection, or CoLD, scale outlines a progression in confidence that a set of
observations stands as evidence of life.
Credit: NASA
Sapphire Canyon is one of 27 rock cores the rover has collected since landing at Jezero Crater in February
2021. Among the suite of science instruments is a weather station that provides
environmental information for future human missions, as well as swatches
of spacesuit material so that NASA can study how it fares on Mars.
Managed for NASA by Caltech, NASA
JPL built and manages operations of the Perseverance rover on behalf of the
agency’s Science Mission Directorate as part of NASA’s Mars Exploration Program
portfolio.
To learn more about Perseverance visit: https://science.nasa.gov/mission/mars-2020-perseverance
Source: NASA Says Mars Rover Discovered Potential Biosignature Last Year - NASA
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