- Sensational new claims about life on
Mars are about to be made by US scientists.
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- Some of the researchers who claimed in
1996 to have found evidence for past life in a Martian meteorite now say
they have further evidence to support their theories in one, possibly two,
other rocks.
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- They will reveal their findings at a
forthcoming conference in America. The announcement will once again arouse
great controversy in the scientific community, which was far from convinced
by the 1996 evidence.
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- Then it was claimed that unusual structures
in a meteorite called AL 84001 looked like fossilised bacteria.
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- The new evidence comes from a study of
the so-called Nakhla meteorite that fell at Nakhla, Egypt, in 1911.
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- It broke up into many pieces. Years later,
a detailed analysis of the rock revealed it to be one of only 13 known
meteorites from the planet Mars.
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- It is estimated to be about 1.37 billion
years old and was thrown into space when a giant asteroid slammed into
Mars hundreds of millions of years ago.
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- After millions of years in space, it
fell to Earth in 1911.
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- Rounded particles
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- Examination of the Nakhla meteorite,
using an optical and a more powerful scanning electron microscope (SEM),
by a team from NASA's Johnson Space Center led by Dr David McKay, has revealed
rounded particles of a limited size range.
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- The researchers suggest that these structures
are the mineralised remnants of bacteria that once lived on Mars. They
say that their size is similar to bacteria found on Earth.
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- Looking closely at the alleged fossilised
bacterial colonies, the scientists say they are reminded of microbes undergoing
the process of division. One of the structures may even have an extension
like a fibril sometimes seen in Earth bacteria.
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- They even go onto to say that they believe
the Nakhla meteorite may have been colonised by two generations of bacteria.
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- They add that another of the meteorites
from Mars, a rock called Shergotty, may also contain the bacterial fossils.
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- For most scientists, though, curious
and minute shapes in meteorites are not enough to make them believe that
bacteria once lived on Mars.
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- They say it is all too easy to be fooled
by the shapes of mineral grains, especially if viewed with an eye looking
for organic shapes.
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