August 7, 1996
James Hartsfield
Johnson Space Center
(713) 483-5111
David Salsbury
Stanford University
(415) 723-2558
Release: 96-160
METEORITE YIELDS EVIDENCE OF
PRIMITIVE LIFE ON EARLY MARS
A NASA research team of scientists
at the Johnson Space Center and at Stanford University has found
evidence that strongly suggests primitive life may have existed
on Mars more than 3.6 billion years ago.
The NASA-funded team found the
first organic molecules thought to be of Martian origin; several
mineral features characteristic of biological activity; and
possible microscopic fossils of primitive, bacteria-like organisms
inside of an ancient Martian rock that fell to Earth as a meteorite.
This array of indirect evidence of past life will be reported
in the Aug. 16 issue of the journal Science, presenting
the investigation to the scientific community at large to reach
a future consensus that will either confirm or deny the team's
conclusion.
The two-year investigation was
co-led by planetary scientists Dr. David McKay, Dr. Everett
Gibson and Kathie Thomas-Keprta of Lockheed-Martin, all from
JSC, with the major collaboration of a Stanford team headed
by Professor of Chemistry Dr. Richard Zare, as well as six other
NASA and university research partners.
"There is not any one finding
that leads us to believe that this is evidence of past life
on Mars. Rather, it is a combination of many things that we
have found," McKay said. "They include Stanford's
detection of an apparently unique pattern of organic molecules,
carbon compounds that are the basis of life. We also found several
unusual mineral phases that are known products of primitive
microscopic organisms on Earth. Structures that could be microsopic
fossils seem to support all of this. The relationship of all
of these things in terms of location within a few hundred
thousandths of an inch of one another is the most compelling
evidence."
"It is very difficult to
prove life existed 3.6 billion years ago on Earth, let alone
on Mars," Zare said. "The existing standard of proof,
which we think we have met, includes having an accurately dated
sample that contains native microfossils, mineralogical features
characteristic of life, and evidence of complex organic chemistry."
"For two years, we have
applied state-of-the-art technology to perform these analyses,
and we believe we have found quite reasonable evidence of past
life on Mars," Gibson added. "We don't claim that
we have conclusively proven it. We are putting this evidence
out to the scientific community for other investigators to verify,
enhance, attack -- disprove if they can -- as part of the scientific
process. Then, within a year or two, we hope to resolve the
question one way or the other."
"What we have found to be
the most reasonable interpretation is of such radical nature
that it will only be accepted or rejected after other groups
either confirm our findings or overturn them," McKay added.
The igneous rock in the 4.2-pound,
potato-sized meteorite has been age-dated to about 4.5 billion
years, the period when the planet Mars formed. The rock is believed
to have originated underneath the Martian surface and to have
been extensively fractured by impacts as meteorites bombarded
the planets in the early inner solar system. Between 3.6 billion
and 4 billion years ago, a time when it is generally thought
that the planet was warmer and wetter, water is believed to
have penetrated fractures in the subsurface rock, possibly forming
an underground water system.
Because the water was saturated
with carbon dioxide from the Martian atmosphere, carbonate minerals
were deposited in the fractures. The team's findings indicate
living organisms may also have assisted in the formation of
the carbonate, and some remains of the microscopic organisms
may have become fossilized, in a fashion similar to the formation
of fossils in limestone on Earth. Then, 15 million years ago,
a huge comet or asteroid struck Mars, ejecting a piece of the
rock from its subsurface location with enough force to escape
the planet. For millions of years, the chunk of rock floated
through space. It encountered Earth's atmosphere 13,000 years
ago and fell in Antarctica as a meteorite.
It is in the tiny globs of carbonate
that the researchers found a number of features that can be
interpreted as suggesting past life. Stanford found easily detectable
amounts of organic molecules called polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons
(PAHs) concentrated in the vicinity of the carbonate. Researchers
at JSC found mineral compounds commonly associated with microscopic
organisms and the possible microscopic fossil structures.
The largest of the possible fossils
are less than 1/100th the diameter of a human hair, and most
are about 1/1000th the diameter of a human hair small
enough that it would take about a thousand laid end-to-end to
span the dot at the end of this sentence. Some are egg-shaped
while others are tubular. In appearance and size, the structures
are strikingly similiar to microscopic fossils of the tiniest
bacteria found on Earth.
The meteorite, called ALH84001,
was found in 1984 in Allan Hills ice field, Antarctica, by an
annual expedition of the National Science Foundation's Antarctic
Meterorite Program. It was preserved for study in JSC's Meteorite
Processing Laboratory and its possible Martian origin was not
recognized until 1993. It is one of only 12 meteorites identified
so far that match the unique Martian chemistry measured by the
Viking spacecraft that landed on Mars in 1976. ALH84001 is by
far the oldest of the 12 Martian meteorites, more than three
times as old as any other.
Many of the team's findings were
made possible only because of very recent technological advances
in high-resolution scanning electron microscopy and laser mass
spectrometry. Only a few years ago, many of the features that
they report were undetectable. Although past studies of this
meteorite and others of Martian origin failed to detect evidence
of past life, they were generally performed using lower levels
of magnification, without the benefit of the technology used
in this research. The recent discovery of extremely small bacteria
on Earth, called nanobacteria, prompted the team to perform
this work at a much finer scale than past efforts.
The nine authors of the Science
report include McKay, Gibson and Thomas-Keprta of JSC; Christopher
Romanek, formerly a National Research Council post-doctoral
fellow at JSC who is now a staff scientist at the Savannah River
Ecology Laboratory at the University of Georgia; Hojatollah
Vali, a National Research Council post-doctoral fellow at JSC
and a staff scientist at McGill University, Montreal, Quebec,
Canada; and Zare, graduate students Simon J. Clemett and Claude
R. Maechling and post-doctoral student Xavier Chillier of the
Stanford University Department of Chemistry.
The team of researchers includes
a wide variety of expertise, including microbiology, mineralogy,
analytical techniques, geochemistry and organic chemistry, and
the analysis crossed all of these disciplines. Further details
on the findings presented in the Science article include:
Researchers at Stanford University
used a laser mass spectrometer -- the most sensitive instrument
of its type in the world to look for the presence of
the common family of organic molecules called PAHs. When microorganisms
die, the complex organic molecules that they contain frequently
degrade into PAHs. PAHs are often associated with ancient sedimentary
rocks, coals and petroleum on Earth and can be common air pollutants.
Not only did the scientists find PAHs in easily detectable amounts
in ALH84001, but they found that these molecules were concentrated
in the vicinity of the carbonate globules. This finding appears
consistent with the proposition that they are a result of the
fossilization process. In addtion, the unique composition of
the meteorite's PAHs is consistent with what the scientists
expect from the fossilization of very primitive microorganisms.
On Earth, PAHs virtually always occur in thousands of forms,
but, in the meteorite, they are dominated by only about a half-dozen
different compounds. The simplicity of this mixture, combined
with the lack of light-weight PAHs like napthalene, also differs
substantially from that of PAHs previously measured in non-Martian
meteorites.
The team found unusual compounds
-- iron sulfides and magnetite -- that are commonly produced
by anaerobic bacteria and other microscopic organisms on Earth.
The compounds were found in locations directly associated with
the fossil-like structures and carbonate globules in the meteorite.
Extreme conditions -- conditions very unlikely to have been
encountered by the meteorite -- would have been required to
produce these compounds in close proximity to one another if
life were not involved. The carbonate also contained tiny grains
of magnetite that are almost identical to magnetic fossil remnants
often left by certain bacteria found on Earth. Other minerals
commonly associated with biological activity on Earth were found
in the carbonate as well.
The formation of the carbonate
or fossils by living organisms while the meteorite was in the
Antarctic was deemed unlikely for several reasons. The carbonate
was age dated using a parent-daughter isotope method and found
to be 3.6 billion years old, and the organic molecules were
first detected well within the ancient carbonate. In addition,
the team analyzed representative samples of other meteorites
from Antarctica and found no evidence of fossil-like structures,
organic molecules or possible biologically produced compounds
and minerals similiar to those in the ALH84001 meteorite. The
composition and location of PAHs organic molecules found in
the meteorite also appeared to confirm that the possible evidence
of life was extraterrestrial. No PAHs were found in the meteorite's
exterior crust, but the concentration of PAHs increased in the
meteorite's interior to levels higher than ever found in Antarctica.
Higher concentrations of PAHs would have likely been found on
the exterior of the meteorite, decreasing toward the interior,
if the organic molecules are the result of contamination of
the meteorite on Earth.
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