Life on Mars: Evidence from Martian Meteorites

New data on martian meteorite 84001 as well as new experimental studies show that thermal or shock decomposition of carbonate, the leading alternative non-biologic explanation for the unusual nanophase magnetite found in this meteorite, cannot explain the chemistry of the actual martian magnetites....

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Wentworth, Susan J., Gibson, Everett K., Jr., McKay, David S., Clemett, Simon J., Thomas-Keptra, Katie L., Spencer, Lauren
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:unknown
Published: 2009
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2060/20090038980
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Summary:New data on martian meteorite 84001 as well as new experimental studies show that thermal or shock decomposition of carbonate, the leading alternative non-biologic explanation for the unusual nanophase magnetite found in this meteorite, cannot explain the chemistry of the actual martian magnetites. This leaves the biogenic explanation as the only remaining viable hypothesis for the origin of these unique magnetites. Additional data from two other martian meteorites show a suite of biomorphs which are nearly identical between meteorites recovered from two widely different terrestrial environments (Egyptian Nile bottomlands and Antarctic ice sheets). This similarity argues against terrestrial processes as the cause of these biomorphs and supports an origin on Mars for these features.