homehome Home chatchat Notifications


Halos on Mars suggest the red planet may have been hospitable for far long longer than thought

Life had more time to appear or even thrive on Mars than we imagined.

Tibi Puiu
May 31, 2017 @ 6:18 pm

share Share


It seems Mars — now barren, dead, and as inhospitable as Thanksgiving with your mother-in-law — was capable of supporting microbial life for far longer than previously estimated. According to a new study, ‘halos’ of silica surrounding fractures at Gale Crater’s floor suggest the area must have been capable of supporting life many years after the lake dried up.

Groundwater present even though water on Gale Crater evaporated

It was shortly after NASA’s Curiosity rover landed on the 96-mile-wide (154-km) Gale Crater in August 2012 that scientists learned that the area was once home to a lake-and-stream system. During the planet’s ancient past, this system could have been habitable. Now, in the bedrock of the same crater, scientists working with the Curiosity mission report spotting these intriguing ‘halos’ of silica or lighter-colored bedrock. These indicate older rock was swept up into the younger ones in the form of dunes, formations that could have formed only after the lake had dried up.

This images shows "halos” of lighter-toned bedrock around fractures. These halos comprise high concentrations of silica and indicate that liquid groundwater flowed through the rocks in Gale crater longer than previously believed. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech.

This image shows “halos” of lighter-toned bedrock around fractures. These halos comprise high concentrations of silica and indicate that liquid groundwater flowed through the rocks in Gale Crater longer than previously believed. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech.

These halos appear in images taken by the rover in 2015 right on the lower slope of Mount Sharp. Smack dab in the middle of Gale Crater, Mount Sharp likely formed after water pushed and deposited sediments on the lake bed over time. As the lake dried and replenished over and over in numerous cycles, each time a new layer of sediment was added that told its own unique story, much like a time capsule. This is why the researchers were stunned when they came across these halo formations rich in silica.

“The concentration of silica is very high at the centerlines of these halos,” said Jens Frydenvang, a scientist at Los Alamos National Laboratory and the University of Copenhagen and lead author of the new study published in the Geophysical Research Letters.

“What we’re seeing is that silica appears to have migrated between very old sedimentary bedrock and into younger overlying rocks. The goal of NASA’s Curiosity rover mission has been to find out if Mars was ever habitable, and it has been very successful in showing that Gale crater once held a lake with water that we would even have been able to drink, but we still don’t know how long this habitable environment endured. What this finding tells us is that, even when the lake eventually evaporated, substantial amounts of groundwater were present for much longer than we previously thought—thus further expanding the window for when life might have existed on Mars,” the scientist added in a statement.

These unexpected halos were analyzed by the rover’s ChemCam instrument after it traveled over 1,700 Martian days from the bottom of Gale crater all the way up to Mount Sharp. The young silica formations were found  20 to 30 meters (66 to 100 feet) in elevation near a rock layer of ancient lake sediments.

“This tells us that the silica found in halos in younger rocks close by was likely remobilized from the old sedimentary rocks by water flowing through the fractures,” Frydenvang said.

Previously, scientists have estimated Mars hasn’t been habitable for about 3.3 billion years or around the same time Gale Crater dried up for good. These recent findings extend Mars’ life-support timeline suggesting microbial could have withstood for considerable more time.

share Share

AI 'Reanimated' a Murder Victim Back to Life to Speak in Court (And Raises Ethical Quandaries)

AI avatars of dead people are teaching courses and testifying in court. Even with the best of intentions, the emerging practice of AI ‘reanimations’ is an ethical quagmire.

This Rare Viking Burial of a Woman and Her Dog Shows That Grief and Love Haven’t Changed in a Thousand Years

The power of loyalty, in this life and the next.

This EV Battery Charges in 18 Seconds and It’s Already Street Legal

RML’s VarEVolt battery is blazing a trail for ultra-fast EV charging and hypercar performance.

DARPA Just Beamed Power Over 5 Miles Using Lasers and Used It To Make Popcorn

A record-breaking laser beam could redefine how we send power to the world's hardest places.

Why Do Some Birds Sing More at Dawn? It's More About Social Behavior Than The Environment

Study suggests birdsong patterns are driven more by social needs than acoustics.

Nonproducing Oil Wells May Be Emitting 7 Times More Methane Than We Thought

A study measured methane flow from more than 450 nonproducing wells across Canada, but thousands more remain unevaluated.

CAR T Breakthrough Therapy Doubles Survival Time for Deadly Stomach Cancer

Scientists finally figured out a way to take CAR-T cell therapy beyond blood.

The Sun Will Annihilate Earth in 5 Billion Years But Life Could Move to Jupiter's Icy Moon Europa

When the Sun turns into a Red Giant, Europa could be life's final hope in the solar system.

Ancient Roman ‘Fast Food’ Joint Served Fried Wild Songbirds to the Masses

Archaeologists uncover thrush bones in a Roman taberna, challenging elite-only food myths

A Man Lost His Voice to ALS. A Brain Implant Helped Him Sing Again

It's a stunning breakthrough for neuroprosthetics