Updated
Updated · ecoportal.net · Jun 14
Curiosity Finds 7 New Martian Organics in 3.5-Billion-Year-Old Rock, Including DNA Precursors
Updated
Updated · ecoportal.net · Jun 14

Curiosity Finds 7 New Martian Organics in 3.5-Billion-Year-Old Rock, Including DNA Precursors

3 articles · Updated · ecoportal.net · Jun 14

Summary

  • Seven previously unseen organic compounds on Mars turned up in a Curiosity rock sample from Gale Crater, alongside 21 carbon-containing molecules, including nitrogen heterocycles tied to RNA and DNA precursors.
  • Two remaining wet-chemistry cups enabled the detection after Curiosity's standard supplies ran low, forcing NASA to try a risky one-off analysis that ended one rover function.
  • The sample came from clay-bearing sandstone in Glen Torridon, where ancient lake mudstones and later water activity made the site a strong candidate for preserving fragile organics.
  • Benzothiophene, a sulfur-bearing molecule found in the rock, points scientists toward either past hydrothermal activity or a history of meteorite impacts on Mars.
  • The findings do not prove life, but they strengthen evidence that ancient Mars preserved complex chemistry and key ingredients associated with habitability.

Insights

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