Mercury,
September/October 1996 Table of Contents
(c)
1996 Astronomical Society of the Pacific
A
certain potato-size rock has caused quite an uproar. When a colleague
showed me the first CNN report, I was pretty doubtful. Organics
in a meteorite? What's new about that? But as I tracked down the
press releases, I realized I might be living the moment that had
inspired me into planetary science: the moment when we found out
there was life on Mars.
The
potato in question is a 4.2-pound meteorite, Allan Hills 84001,
the oldest of 12 meteorites whose composition indicates they were
once pieces of Mars. Allan Hills is our only material record of
events on the Red Planet billions of years ago, when the river valleys
seen by the Mariner and Viking spacecraft formed [see
"The Surface of Mars," January/February 1983, p. 2]. Within the
meteorite, a team of researchers led by David McKay of the NASA
Johnson Space Center found evidence for microorganisms:
- The
meteorite contains complex organic compounds, the first to be
identified in a martian meteorite. The compounds, polycyclic aromatic
hydrocarbons, are produced when dead microbes decompose. These
organics can also be produced during star formation; indeed, they
appears in most meteorites. But spectra show that the hydrocarbons
in Allan Hills differ from those in other meteorites.
- The
meteorite also contains magnetite and iron sulfide, minerals that
on Earth are associated with sulfur-eating bacteria. Whereas magnetite
forms by oxidation, iron sulfide forms by the opposite process,
reduction. The proximity of these two processes is characteristic
of biological activity, and difficult to produce by other means.
- The
organics, magnetite, and iron sulfide are concentrated in the
outermost layers of small globules of carbonate, a mineral that
on Earth is typically the product of microorganisms. At the least,
the presence of carbonates confirms that Mars once had running
water and thicker air. According to an analysis of the carbon
and oxygen isotopes in the carbonate, the globules formed 3.6
billion years ago in water at a temperature between 0 and 80 degrees.
- On
the surface of the globules, electron microscopes spotted egglike
and wormlike shapes that look like terrestrial fossils of the
smallest bacteria. Most of these shapes are roughly 50 nanometers
across.
Life
is the simplest explanation that fits all these facts. But looking
for life is like panning for gold: Fool's gold can look uncannily
like the real thing. Over the past decade, several researchers have
suggested that the carbon-isotope composition of the martian meteorites
is evidence for past life. But it could also be due to inorganic chemistry.
In the 1960s, Nobel laureate Harold Urey and other scientists suggested
that algae-like "organized elements" in some non-martian meteorites
might be fossils [see Echoes of the Past, p. 7]. In the early 1970s,
however, researchers detected structural and chemical differences
between these elements and terrestrial microfossils.
The
Allan Hills study seems to have avoided the pitfalls, but only further
testing will tell. Do the sulfur isotopes in the meteorite bear
the telltale signature of life? A new University of New Mexico study
has suggested they don't. Are the carbonates indeed 3.6 billion
years old, and did they really form at comfortable temperatures?
Maybe not, other studies have asserted. Do the bacteria-like structures
have cell walls? Do they contain amino acids? Are any of them caught
in the act of cell division? Ultimately, the answers may depend
on retrieving more rock samples from Mars, a mission that NASA administrator
Dan Goldin said the space agency may now launch as soon as 2001.
On
Earth, paleontologists have found microfossils and carbon- isotope
signatures in the oldest sedimentary rocks, 3.8 billion years old.
Older rocks have been destroyed by geologic activity, wiping out
our record of the origins of life on Earth. But this record is preserved
on Mars. Our genealogy may lie there.
Which
characteristics of Earthly life are fundamental, and which are an
accident of historical circumstance? If microbial Martians are similar
to our bacteria, even though they arose independently, there must
be a certain inevitability about what we are [see "The Copernican
Revolution Comes Around," p. 14]. If they are identical
to our bacteria, then life must have emerged on one planet and been
carried by meteorites to the other. We may, as Stanford chemist
Richard Zere said on "Nightline," be the descendants of Martians.
If
life arises wherever it can -- wherever there are water, organics,
and energy -- we live in a universe teeming with living beings.
Astronomers have thought so for years, but only this year have the
speculative vapors condensed: first, planets around other Sun-like
stars [see "In the Wink of a Star," July/August, p. 20], and now,
life on another world. Aug. 6, 1996 was the day the universe came
alive.
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