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Re: Yellowstone Offers Clue To Martian Life

From: Stig_Agermose@online.pol.dk (Stig Agermose)
Date: Thu, 7 May 1998 07:30:41 +0200
Fwd Date: Thu, 07 May 1998 08:14:43 -0400
Subject: Re: Yellowstone Offers Clue To Martian Life

>From the Nando Times. URL:

http://www.nando.net/newsroom/ntn/health/050698/health5_20504_noframes.h
tml

Stig

*******


Yellowstone offers insight about Mars to NASA


Copyright =A91998 Nando.net
Copyright =A91998 The Christian Science Monitor


(May 6, 1998 12:56 p.m. EDT http://www.nando.net) -- Ten years from
now, a spacecraft possibly carrying extraterrestrial life will land on
Earth after an extended unmanned mission to Mars. While the purpose of
that historic trip - bringing home Martian soil for firsthand
examination - could yield substantive proof that we are not alone in
the universe, the voyage itself comes replete with its own cosmic
perils.

For NASA and world health officials, the essential challenge is
determining how much of a biological threat, if any, microscopic
organisms plucked from the Red Planet pose to both humans and the
larger global ecosystem.

"There's no reason to put the Earth at risk due to our own biological
ignorance. That's why we are exploring every possible safeguard," says
John Rummel, NASA's newly appointed "planetary protection officer."

In its preparations for the mission, one of the first places NASA
turned is the surreal, otherworldly interior of Yellowstone National
Park, where scientists believe that microbes inhabiting park hot
springs could provide a preview of what awaits the robotic lander on
Mars.

Thriving in conditions where other animals would perish, Yellowstone
microbes thrive in a place with 300-degree temperature fluctuations,
surrounded by corrosive acids that can eat through steel, and within
toxic, oxygen-deprived niches that appear deceivingly sterile. Much
like Mars.

Indeed, some astral ecologists believe the primitive life forms here
may be distant relatives - analogues - of Martian microbes swept
together through the Milky Way on comets or asteroids billions of years
ago and deposited on the neighboring infant planets.

And in many ways, Yellowstone's enigmatic concentration of thermal
phenomena provides a glimpse at earthly life when Gaea was younger,
cradling a more hostile and simplified landscape.

"The premise behind our research is that if you want to better
understand the organisms that may have existed, or still do exist, in
the extreme conditions on Mars, a logical place to look for possible
comparison is in the extreme environments on Earth," says
microbiologist Fred Albert, hoisting a rack of colorful microbial
"extremophiles" from hot springs.

>From their small laboratory at Montana Biotech, a company located at
the end of a dirt road near Belgrade, Mont., Albert and fellow
microbiologist Joan Combie are assisting NASA in identifying potential
planetary parallels.

According to Carlton Allen, a scientist with Lockheed-Martin based at
the Johnson Space Center in Houston, Yellowstone's role has grown in
prominence since the discovery in 1996 of the so-called Mars meteorite
in Antarctica.

This chunk of what could be Martian debris is believed to have been
cast off into space 16 million years ago after an asteroid collided
with the planet and sent the fragment sailing toward an eventual
rendezvous with Earth 13,000 years ago.

Allen, who worked on the team assigned to investigate the meteorite,
says it contains a tiny worm-like sliver of what might be a microbial
fossil. What's remarkable is that it bears a likeness to organisms
studied by Combie and Albert in Yellowstone.

Researchers say that many of Yellowstone's extremophiles occupy a
different branch on the tree of life than the vast majority of other
earthly organisms grouped in the domains eucarya (which includes
humans, plants, and fungi) and bacteria.

Characterized under the heading archaea, these creatures have an
amazing lineage that extends deep in the geologic record to the
twilight of Earth's organic origins. Rather than deriving sustenance
from other carbon life forms, some of the archaea are sulfur and silica
eaters.

"To put the breadth of this domain in perspective, there is more
similarity between people and trees than between certain species of
archaea," Albert says. "They challenge us to expand the definition of
'normal life.' "

The theory is that ancestors of these tiny creatures, fertilized by
cosmic dust and changed little by evolution over the past 3.5 billion
years, sprang to life in our ancient oceans and persist in
Yellowstone's geothermal zones because the habitat is still relatively
unaltered.

It is possible that such life could have followed a similar path to
Mars when it, too, had vast seas and active volcanism.

Allen says it is unclear whether any Martian remnants survive or what
might happen if they were to somehow reawaken on Earth.

He notes that the next Mars lander will collect samples mostly from
rocks and areas of subsurface crust where evidence of ancient life may
be clustered. So "there are real concerns, both scientific and legal,
about bringing back rock and soil samples from far away places because
of legitimate worries about transporting hidden microbes and bugs,"
Allen says. "In the U.S. you can't even bring back a box of dirt from
Central Africa without encountering tight restrictions, so you can
imagine the fears about hauling back dirt from space."

In advance of that, Combie and Albert are refining the process of
identifying microorganisms by isolating and, in some cases, arousing to
life, microbes embedded in Yellowstone travertine to see how they can
be manipulated.

"Using Yellowstone organisms ... NASA wants to know if they can
sterilize whatever is brought back," Combie says. "What recent tests
show is that some microbes are surprisingly resilient."

A few months ago, public-health officials bombarded organisms with high
levels of gamma rays to see what it would take to destroy potentially
hazardous microbes. It's the same sterilization techniques used to
successfully kill threats such as the Ebola virus - but the Yellowstone
microbes were able to withstand the high dosage levels of radiation,
leading researchers to view potential Martian life with greater
reverence.

This is one reason NASA is reevaluating its quarantine procedure. While
its methods worked 30 years ago when Apollo 11 returned with the first
payload of moon rocks, Rummel says today that NASA would follow a
different, more stringent protocol.

During the Apollo missions, astronauts were in the same, sealed
compartment as the quarantined material. That caused problems when the
humans needed to get out long before the moon rocks would have
ordinarily been allowed out of quarantine. Those specimens proved
biologically sterile, but Rummel says Martian rock has more potential
for nurturing life.

Therefore, once the Mars lander returns, it is probable that any soil
samples will remain enclosed for several months, if not years, before
they are deemed safe.

Still, despite the potential dangers, officials say the benefits
derived from probing Mars far outweigh any risks.

If evidence of life on Mars is confirmed, Allen says, the discovery
will enable scientists to narrow their focus to two primary theories:
Either life arose at one place in the solar system and meteorites
flying back and forth have spread it, or life arose completely
separately in the first two places humans looked.

"While both possibilities are exciting, the latter leads to endless
speculation because it shows how easy it apparently is for so-called
'life' to get started," he says. "And that has some real implications
for how we think about the rest of the solar system and the universe."


By Todd Wilkinson, Special to The Christian Science Monitor

Copyright =A91998 Nando.net




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