I Potential biosignature found in Mars rock

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NASA's Mars rover has identified potential biosignatures in Jezero Crater, specifically mineral associations of vivianite and greigite that may indicate past microbial life. These minerals could form through both biological and abiotic processes, but the current evidence leans towards a biological origin, with the research team expressing high confidence in their findings. The discovery, while not entirely new, highlights the maturation of Mars research and could influence future funding amidst concerns over budget cuts, particularly affecting the Mars Sample Return mission. The discussion also touches on the challenges of ruling out abiotic explanations and the need for advanced methods to analyze Martian samples and exoplanet atmospheres. Overall, the findings underscore the ongoing quest to understand the potential for life beyond Earth.
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A NASA rover found chemicals that are difficult to explain without life.
Publication: Redox-driven mineral and organic associations in Jezero Crater, Mars
Article: NASA Says Mars Rover Discovered Potential Biosignature Last Year
Press conference

The combination of these minerals [vivianite (hydrated iron phosphate) and greigite (iron sulfide)], which appear to have formed by electron-transfer reactions between the sediment and organic matter, is a potential fingerprint for microbial life, which would use these reactions to produce energy for growth. The minerals also can be generated abiotically, or without the presence of life. Hence, there are ways to produce them without biological reactions, including sustained high temperatures, acidic conditions, and binding by organic compounds. However, the rocks at Bright Angel do not show evidence that they experienced high temperatures or acidic conditions, and it is unknown whether the organic compounds present would’ve been capable of catalyzing the reaction at low temperatures.
The ~100 authors don't find a good way this could have formed without life, but also can't rule it out. Now that they have shared their findings with the larger community someone else might find an explanation - or maybe it was actually made by life.
 
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Astronomy news on Phys.org
Here is some related information:

One of the main origin of life on earth scenarios involves the interaction of fluids from serpentinization of basalt raising up through undersea sediments and interacting with chemically different seawater across an interface partly composed of greigite. This is supposed to allow redox reactions between the low pH seawater and the high pH serpentization fluids. The pH difference is favors the two sides of the reaction at the different pH's.

Screenshot 2025-09-10 at 11.21.28 AM.webp


This is a prebiotic reaction to build organic compounds before life was around.
 
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Supposedly the research team, which includes a lot of people, are like 99% convinced this is a direct signature of previous life. Although the public communications will be conservative for obvious reasons.

Regardless, I'll settle for it simply letting NASA get more funding.
 
The discovery is nothing new. It's now being brought back to light in order to possibly avoid the feared budget cuts.
Mars Sample Return has essentially been canceled, which is very sad, given that billions have already been invested in this complex mission. ESA is also involved.

:frown:
 
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willyengland said:
The discovery is nothing new. It's now being brought back to light in order to possibly avoid the feared budget cuts.
Mars Sample Return has essentially been canceled, which is very sad, given that billions have already been invested in this complex mission. ESA is also involved.

:frown:
The discovery itself isn't new, but from what I gathered the analysis of possible abiotic pathways was being studied and the conclusion is that biological origin seems most likely explanation at the moment.

Its the most convincing piece of evidence a non expert like me has seen yet. Especially since it came from exactly the type of formations these things are found on Earth.

But like I said, regardless of the outcome, its a resounding success if it leads to more funding or prevents more budget cuts.
 
Fascinating discussion. What makes this so compelling is how closely the mineral associations mirror environments on Earth where microbial life thrives. Of course, abiotic explanations can’t be ruled out yet, but it really shows how much Mars research has matured. Even if it turns out non-biological, these findings still sharpen the tools we’ll need when samples eventually make it back to Earth.
 
willyengland said:
Mars Sample Return has essentially been canceled, which is very sad, given that billions have already been invested in this complex mission. ESA is also involved.
Where do you get billions from? Lockheed Martin got $200 million for Mars ascent vehicle studies and NASA spent $310 million in FY2024. I don't find other large budget items.
The expected cost of the mission exceeded $10 billion, which made people question the approach.
 
JLowe said:
Supposedly the research team, which includes a lot of people, are like 99% convinced this is a direct signature of previous life.
Do you have a reference that supports this?
 
So, am I to understand these are chemicals/reactions that could have been produced by life? On a planet we're physically scouring I don't think I'm going to find that sort of discovery compelling. If anything reduces my hope that we might find alien life in my lifetime. I had been thinking there might be unequivocal chemical signatures we could detect with telescopes from light years away. But here we have an apparently excellent candidate that can only give hints. I mean, at this point I feel like we're close to ruling-out anything but the most rudimentary and localized life.
 
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russ_watters said:
I don't think I'm going to find that sort of discovery compelling.
Yeah. There have been several of these this might indicate life discoveries in thee last few years. To some degree they all seem equivocal. Possible non-biological ways to make particular chemicals are difficult to eliminate.

russ_watters said:
I had been thinking there might be unequivocal chemical signatures we could detect with telescopes from light years away.
There is a different potentially useful approach however. It is called assembly theory and is based being able to identify products of life spectroscopically which can be (in theory) done with telescopes (if enough of the molecules are present). The main argument is that non-biological reactions may produce a bunch of chemicals but they will be not of a single type of chemical, but a very complex mix of chemicals, unlike the select set of chemicals found in living things. An often cited example is what was found in the Murchison meteorite which has a lot of organic compounds. Although there are many kinds of chemicals found in biology (on earth), there are also a lot of others. This has been compared to tar (as opposed to life).
Biological processes on the other hand will make lots of chemicals on a much more limited range of types. These higher concentrations of fewer types on chemicals might be detectable. They think of this as the copy number of a chemical species. This indicates how focused production is on the particular kind of chemical. The higher copy number, the more the chemical is being produced rather than other chemicals.

Those that like these ideas think that only life could get through the may steps (15 or more) required to assemble the chemicals from more primordial chemicals (thus the name assembly theory). They figure that chemicals requiring 15 or more assembly steps (steps of chemical synthesis) would be clearly due to life processes and not abiotic in origin. Thus making it a good biomarker at distance. They have been doing experiments in labs on this process of chemical exploration of chemical structure space.
I am pretty sure that this is a NASA funded approach, but I don't think it is actually being used to search space for like at this time.

What I described above in post #2 of this thread is basically the wet rock planet approach. Where water and basaltic type rock come together serpentization reactions can produce simple organic compounds. This is a NASA favorite and is considered a likely basis for life arising on Earth and the basis of looking for (Earth-like) life on many planets, such as Mars (formerly wet, possibly still so on the inside) and Enceladus (thought by some to have a solid center, surrounded by an ocean under a layer of ice). These kind of reactions have been seem on Earth and in labs. In addition, greigite (which can act as a catalyst for some of these reactions) is a naturally occurring mineral. Simple organic chemicals can be produced in this manner, but not a living process.

There may be other ways to made the chemicals needed for Earth-like life. There may also be other kinds of life chemically distinct. No one knows and our negatives are neither informative nor convincing (to me anyway). Assembly theory can (in theory) get around this problem.

On the other hand assembly theory is not a theory about how life works and the steps it went through during its emergence. So it says nothing about these mechanisms and is only concerned what is statistically unlikely enough (for non-living processes to make) to have to have been made by life.

What would be more convincing and fulfilling (to me) would be:
  1. bring back materials so they could be studied in labs on Earth, or
  2. take people to Mars and do lab stuff there, or
  3. make much more sophisticated robots and Martian labs to study things on Mars without people there.
What was found on Mars is basically a fossil of which only the chemistry and some not too detailed structure could be studied. Sectioning rocks and looking at them under a nice microscope would be more informative.
Even then there is the issue of clearly identifying life if you were to find it. Near the border between living and non-living this can be difficult.

If I were deciding what to do, I would get people (or highly capable robots) on Mars with a drilling rig an start sampling subsurface areas where liquid water might exist. (Earthly life has no problem living far under ground.) Being subsurface would. protect the life forms from the bad space stuff (UV etc.) and there would be chemicals there they could eat. That's where I would thing life would be on Mars if its there. The samples could be then analyzed in Martian labs by the robots or people.

There are also planetary protection procedures to follow to avoid contaminating Mars with Earth life. These make everything more difficult (like collecting samples) and could be interpreted as ruling out putting people on Mars at all (due to contamination hazards).
 
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mfb said:
Where do you get billions from? ...
The expected cost of the mission exceeded $10 billion, which made people question the approach.
You are right. That's what I meant.
 
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russ_watters said:
So, am I to understand these are chemicals/reactions that could have been produced by life?
I think the difference is, there is no good abiotic explanation at the moment, despite quite a bit of searching for one. In many of the other recent "possible biosignature" findings, plausible abiotic explanations do exist.

Its no surprise finding signs of life is difficult, the Martian surface has been incredibly hostile for a very long time, and it seems to be the best non earth candidate to have possibly supported life by far at the moment.

If we could haul a truck load of rocks to a lab, it would be so easy, yet here we are.
 
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Given that single cell life started on earth within the first billion years of its existence and how long it existed as the only form of life it should not be surprising to find traces on Mars. Seems similar to the first exoplanet discoveries - they similarly needed the full rigor of scientific proof, but no great surprise to find they existed

It will be interesting as methods to analyze the chemistry of exoplanet atmospheres continue to improve.
 
  • #14
Whether the geological activity and conditions on early Mars favoured the formation of life is up for discussion. ( considering that how life formed on earth is unknown ).

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Noachian
 
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