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Mars Extant Life: What's Next? Conference Report.

Authors :
Carrier BL
Beaty DW
Meyer MA
Blank JG
Chou L
DasSarma S
Des Marais DJ
Eigenbrode JL
Grefenstette N
Lanza NL
Schuerger AC
Schwendner P
Smith HD
Stoker CR
Tarnas JD
Webster KD
Bakermans C
Baxter BK
Bell MS
Benner SA
Bolivar Torres HH
Boston PJ
Bruner R
Clark BC
DasSarma P
Engelhart AE
Gallegos ZE
Garvin ZK
Gasda PJ
Green JH
Harris RL
Hoffman ME
Kieft T
Koeppel AHD
Lee PA
Li X
Lynch KL
Mackelprang R
Mahaffy PR
Matthies LH
Nellessen MA
Newsom HE
Northup DE
O'Connor BRW
Perl SM
Quinn RC
Rowe LA
Sauterey B
Schneegurt MA
Schulze-Makuch D
Scuderi LA
Spilde MN
Stamenković V
Torres Celis JA
Viola D
Wade BD
Walker CJ
Wiens RC
Williams AJ
Williams JM
Xu J
Source :
Astrobiology [Astrobiology] 2020 Jun; Vol. 20 (6), pp. 785-814. Date of Electronic Publication: 2020 May 28.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

On November 5-8, 2019, the "Mars Extant Life: What's Next?" conference was convened in Carlsbad, New Mexico. The conference gathered a community of actively publishing experts in disciplines related to habitability and astrobiology. Primary conclusions are as follows: A significant subset of conference attendees concluded that there is a realistic possibility that Mars hosts indigenous microbial life. A powerful theme that permeated the conference is that the key to the search for martian extant life lies in identifying and exploring refugia ("oases"), where conditions are either permanently or episodically significantly more hospitable than average. Based on our existing knowledge of Mars, conference participants highlighted four potential martian refugium (not listed in priority order): Caves, Deep Subsurface, Ices, and Salts. The conference group did not attempt to reach a consensus prioritization of these candidate environments, but instead felt that a defensible prioritization would require a future competitive process. Within the context of these candidate environments, we identified a variety of geological search strategies that could narrow the search space. Additionally, we summarized a number of measurement techniques that could be used to detect evidence of extant life (if present). Again, it was not within the scope of the conference to prioritize these measurement techniques-that is best left for the competitive process. We specifically note that the number and sensitivity of detection methods that could be implemented if samples were returned to Earth greatly exceed the methodologies that could be used at Mars. Finally, important lessons to guide extant life search processes can be derived both from experiments carried out in terrestrial laboratories and analog field sites and from theoretical modeling.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1557-8070
Volume :
20
Issue :
6
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Astrobiology
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
32466662
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1089/ast.2020.2237