http://www.space.com/scienceastronomy/mars_microorganisms_040803.html

Those twin robots hard at work on Mars have transmitted teasing views
that reinforce the prospect that microbial life may exist on the red
planet.
Results from NASA�s Spirit and Opportunity rovers are being looked
over by a legion of planetary experts, including a scientist who
remains steadfast that his experiment in 1976 proved the presence of
active microbial life in the topsoil of Mars.

"All factors necessary to constitute a habitat for life as we know it
exist on current-day Mars," explained Gilbert Levin, executive officer
for science at Spherix Incorporated of Beltsville, Maryland.

Levin made his remarks here Monday at the International Symposium on
Optical Science and Technology, the 49th annual meeting of Society of
Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE).

Provocative find

Levin has a long-standing interest in time-weathered Mars and the
promise of life today on that distant and dusty world.

NASA�s 1976 Viking mission to Mars was geared-up to look for possible
martian life. And it was Levin�s Labeled Release experiment that made
a provocative find: The presence of a highly reactive agent in the
surface material of Mars.

Levin concluded in 1997 that this activity was triggered by living
microorganisms lurking in the martian soil � a judgment he admits has
not been generally accepted by the scientific community.

Now roll forward to 2004. Consider the findings of Spirit and
Opportunity, the golf-cart sized robots wheeling over Mars at Gusev
Crater and Meridiani Planum.

"Those rovers have been absolutely sensational, pouring out thousands
of images. Those images have lots of information in them. And I�ve
tried to deduce something in there relative to life�and I think I
found a lot," Levin told SPACE.com.

Squeezed out of the soil

In perusing rover imagery, Levin reports there is clear evidence for
liquid water existing under Martian environmental conditions. "The
images should be reviewed against the background of surface
temperatures as varying from below to above freezing reported by both
Spirit and Opportunity," he explained.

Levin points to the potential for mud puddles on Mars, showing an
image of clearly disturbed martian soil after rover airbags bounced
across Mars� surface. Possible standing water and sinkholes can also
be seen in rover imagery, according to his analysis. In some pictures,
the often-discussed "blueberries, " tiny spheres of material,
disappear as if submerged underneath mud-like surroundings, he added.

Then there are tracks left by the machines as they roll across the
martian terrain. Self-taken shots by the robots show what Levin said
appears to be water squeezed out of the soil which then freezes into a
whitish residue left in embedded tread marks.

Similarly, Levin added, are images taken by Opportunity of the results
from an operation of the robot�s Rock Abrasion Tool, or RAT. The
center of that particular RAT hole is largely white, possibly
indicating the formation of frost since the hole was drilled, he
noted.

Organisms there now?

"The evidence presented strongly indicates the presence of liquid
water or moisture at the Mars Exploration Rover sites," Levin reported
at the SPIE meeting. "Mars today could support many forms of
terrestrial microbial life."

Other scientists are cautious to point out that the presence of water
does not guarantee life. Rather, it means one crucial ingredient
exists.

There is clear evidence for frost or ice on Mars, the former Viking
experimenter stated. At some point of the day -- when temperatures
climb above freezing -- there�s going to be moisture�"and that�s
enough to support microorganisms," he said.

None of the many new findings about Mars revealed by Spirit and
Opportunity, Levin concluded, conflict with, or render untenable, his
long-held belief that the Viking Labeled Release experiment in 1976
detected living microorganisms in the soil of Mars.

"I contend that today you could take a great many Earth
microorganisms, put them on Mars, and they�d grow," Levin said. "And I
think there are organisms there now. They may have come from Earth.
They may have originated on Mars. They may have come from a third
place that populated both Mars and Earth."

Rocks can be kicked up from one planet by an asteroid impact, drift
through space for eons, then land on the other. Other studies have
shown that these rocks could potentially transport life, in a dormant
phase, from one planet to the other.

Levin said that he thinks the "greatest speculation" would be to say
there can be no life on Mars.

Moon used as Earth bio-shield

If indeed Mars is rife with life, care should be taken in hauling back
to Earth specimens of rock and surface materials from the red planet.
NASA has indicated that, next decade, robotic craft could be
dispatched to gather and return to Earth select samples of Mars for
detailed laboratory study.

Could those bits of Mars, perhaps laden with martian microbes, act as
dangerous cargo?

As a precaution, Levin advocates a kind of bio-shield strategy for
Earth � but using the Moon.

The new NASA vision to reestablish a human presence on the Moon is
good timing, Levin said. "Bring samples of Mars not to Earth but to
the Moon," he said. "There we would have built a scientific laboratory
in which scientists could examine the samples and determine whether or
not there is a hazard."



xponent

Marvin Maru

rob


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