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Microbes Or Their DNA Could Survive In Martian Ice And A Future Rover Could Dig For It

When NASA's Phoenix Lander touched down on Mars in 2008, its landing thruster exposed subsurface ice. In the following days, the lander used its scoop to remove some regolith, exposing more ice that sublimated over the course of four days. Image Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/University of Arizona/Texas A&M University

Frozen in time, ancient microbes or their remains could be found in Martian ice deposits during future missions to the red planet. By recreating Mars-like conditions in the lab, a team of researchers from NASA Goddard Space Flight Center and Penn State demonstrated that fragments of the molecules that make up proteins in E. coli bacteria, if present in Mars' permafrost and ice caps, could remain intact for over 50 million years, despite harsh and continuous exposure to cosmic radiation.



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