Just an amazing picture.

Nice artical too.

Greg S.


http://www.nationalpost.com/news/canada/story.html?id=2644178




Microbes found in Arctic meteor crater could help point to life on Mars

Randy Boswell, Canwest News ServiceĀ  Published: Friday, March 05, 2010
Related Topics


Oceanographer Dale Stokes surveys the Haughton Crater on Devon Island in 
Canada's Arctic. Ed Struzik, Canwest News Service Files Oceanographer Dale 
Stokes surveys the Haughton Crater on Devon Island in Canada's Arctic.

Scientists studying an ancient meteorite crash site in the Canadian Arctic have 
detected traces of microbes that point to the key role played by impact craters 
in the evolution of life on Earth and could help determine whether life once 
existed on Mars.

The discovery -- hailed by an 11-member team of researchers from Canada, 
Britain, the United States and Sweden as a scientific "first" -- was made at 
Devon Island's Haughton Crater, a uniquely dry and desolate geological gem 
probed frequently by experts from NASA because of its Mars-like features.

"Meteorite impact craters have been proposed as possible sites to find 
microbial life on Mars, as they are a focus for heat and water circulation," 
says the research team, including University of Western Ontario geologist 
Gordon Osinski.

The researchers examined meteorite-shocked rocks from numerous sites throughout 
the 24-kilometrewide crater and found telltale traces of sulphur left behind by 
heat-loving, "thermophilic" bacteria that moved into the crash site after the 
impact.

"Evidence of widespread microbial activity" in the Canadian crater, the team 
says, has "shown for the first time that a crater was pervasively colonized by 
microbes, and that colonization of over 20 cubic kilometres of impact rock was 
rapid, within 10,000 years after impact, while the rock was still warm."

The team concludes: "This emphasizes the potential of impact craters in the 
evolution of early life on Earth, and the search for life on other planets."

Several of the researchers, including team leader John Parnell of the 
University of Aberdeen, have made previous findings at the Haughton Crater, 
highlighting its value in the search for extraterrestrial life as well as in 
detecting signs of tiny, primordial organisms from the dawn of Earth history.

In 2005, a Parnell-led study at the Nunavut site yielded proof that 
billion-year-old "biomarkers" -- faint chemical traces of organic matter -- had 
survived the massive meteor strike that created the Haughton crater 23 million 
years ago.

The latest project has yielded proof that the space rock that struck Devon 
Island created warm, protective niches for microscopic organisms, allowing them 
to flourish -- and leave fossilized signatures of their activity --at the 
impact site.

The remoteness and "polar desert" environment of Devon Island means the crater 
has undergone much less change than other impact sites around the world, making 
it one of the best places on Earth to study a simulated Martian landscape.

Spacecraft that have probed Mars in recent years have fuelled a belief among 
experts the planet once had water and supported rudimentary forms of life.

Scientists seeking signs of extraterrestrial life are increasingly focused on 
developing techniques to detect infinitesimally small organisms, fossilized 
remnants of microbes or merely the faint traces of the biochemical building 
blocks needed as a base for life's primordial soup.

In 2004, British scientist Charles Cockell described Devon Island as one of the 
Earth's best remaining examples of "the sort of habitat that would have given 
rise to life on Earth."

And based on his studies of the Haughton Crater, Mr. Cockell stated at the time 
such impact sites offer a warm, hospitable habitat for bacteria and algae, and 
also for the "pre-biotic" proteins that had to come together for that first 
spark of life on Earth.

Read more: 
http://www.nationalpost.com/news/canada/story.html?id=2644178#ixzz0hLbjvqJ8
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