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Smithsonian Magazine on MSNScientists Hope This Tool Could Identify Tiny Fossils on Mars, Revealing Hints to Potential Early Life on the PlanetIf Mars ever hosted microorganisms in its bygone oceans, their fossils might still be preserved in minerals—and now, we have a new potential way to find them
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ExtremeTech on MSNNew Scientific Instrument Could Help Search for Life on MarsPlanetary scientists in Algeria and Switzerland have developed a scientific instrument that could help hunt for signs of life on Mars. Used to locate microbial fossils in gypsum deposits here on Earth,
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If Mars has microbe fossils, a laser and rock quarry in Algeria could help find themAdditionally, Mars has unique environmental conditions, which could affect biosignature preservation over geological periods. Further studies are needed." Nevertheless, Sellam is proud to have led "the first astrobiology study to involve Algeria," and ...
Searching for small fossils in big rocks requires specialized tools --tools that scientists could also use to look for evidence of life on Mars in rocks that may be similar on both planets.
The question of whether life once existed on Mars may be answered by a new laser instrument from the University of Bern. The device can be carried by a rover to zap samples of the Red Planet to see if they contain traces of microfossils.
Scientists found fossil-like traces in gypsum, suggesting ancient microbial life may have existed on Mars billions of years ago.
The first life on Earth formed four billion years ago, as microbes living in pools and seas: what if the same thing happened on Mars? If it did, how would we prove it? Scientists hoping to identify fossil evidence of ancient Martian microbial life have now found a way to test their hypothesis,
Scientists may finally have a way to detect ancient life on Mars by studying microbial fossils preserved in sulfate minerals. Gypsum deposits on Mars may be hiding evidence of past microbial life — similar to the first organisms that appeared on Earth four billion years ago.
Scientists are using a laser-based tool to aid future Mars missions in identifying evidence of life on the Red Planet.
Scientist is proud to have led "the first astrobiology study to involve Algeria," and believes that his findings are a major step towards finding evidence of life on Mars. Scientists searching for ...
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