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Life on Mars? NASA's Curiosity suggests so

December 09, 2014 13:11 IST

Led by a team of scientists of Indian-origin, NASA’s Curiosity rover has found new evidence of water on Mars, indicating that the planet most like Earth in the solar system was suitable for microbial life.

Pictures and other data collected by NASA’s Mars rover Curiosity show that rivers once flowed into a lake or lakes at the bottom of Gale Crate, an enormous dimple carved out by an incoming space rock.

NASA said its interpretation of Curiosity’s finds in Gale Crater suggests ancient Mars maintained a climate that could have produced long-lasting lakes at many locations on the Red Planet.

This illustration depicts a lake of water partially filling Mars's Gale Crater, receiving runoff from snow melting on the crater's northern rim. Photograph: NASA/JPL-Caltech/ESA/DLR/FU Berlin/MSSS

The American space agency said Mars’s MountSharp was built by sediments deposited in a large lake bed over tens of millions of years. “If our hypothesis for MountSharp holds up, it challenges the notion that warm and wet conditions were transient, local, or only underground on Mars,” said Indian- American Ashwin Vasavada, who is the Curiosity deputy project scientist at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena.

The thickness of the rock outcrops indicates that the lake -- or lakes -- must have sloshed around the bottom of 154-kilometre Gale Crater over the course of millions of years, though the lake probably dried up and then reappeared a number of times, the researchers said.

“A more radical explanation is that Mars’s ancient, thicker atmosphere raised temperatures above freezing globally, but so far we don’t know how the atmosphere did that,” he added.

MountSharp stands about 5 kilometres tall, its lower flanks exposing hundreds of rock layers.

The rock layers -- alternating between lake, river and wind deposits -- bear witness to the repeated filling and evaporation of a Martian lake much larger and longer-lasting than any previously examined close-up.

Evenly layered rock photographed by the Mast Camera on NASA's Curiosity Mars Rover shows a pattern typical of a lake-floor sedimentary deposit not far from where flowing water entered a lake. Photograph: NASA/JPL-Caltech/MSSS

In a statement NASA said why this layered mountain sits in a crater has been a challenging question for researchers. “We are making headway in solving the mystery of MountSharp,” said Curiosity Project Scientist John Grotzinger of the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, California.

“Where there’s now a mountain, there may have once been a series of lakes.” Curiosity currently is investigating the lowest sedimentary layers of MountSharp, a section of rock 150 metres high dubbed the Murray formation.

Rivers carried sand and silt to the lake, depositing the sediments at the mouth of the river to form deltas similar to those found at river mouths on Earth.

This cycle occurred over and over again.

“The great thing about a lake that occurs repeatedly, over and over, is that each time it comes back it is another experiment to tell you how the environment works,” Grotzinger said.

On the 8-kilometre journey from Curiosity’s 2012 landing site to its current work site at the base of MountSharp, the rover uncovered clues about the changing shape of the crater floor during the era of lakes.

“We found sedimentary rocks suggestive of small, ancient deltas stacked on top of one another,” said Curiosity science team member Sanjeev Gupta of ImperialCollege in London. “Curiosity crossed a boundary from an environment dominated by rivers to an environment dominated by lakes,” he said.

Read: Curiosity digs deep, grabs first sample of Mars rock

Lalit K Jha
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