By

William Harwood /

CBS News/ March 12, 2013, 4:02 PM

Mars rover Curiosity confirms habitable environment in distant past

Robots may be out best bet for landing on Mars.

Robots may be out best bet for landing on Mars. / NASA/JPL-Caltech/Malin Space Science Systems

Analyzing powdered samples drilled from the interior of a sedimentary rock, the Curiosity Mars rover has detected traces of the chemicals and compounds necessary for a habitable environment in the red planet's distant past, scientists reported Tuesday.

Whether life ever managed to evolve on Mars remains an open question, but the environment characterized by Curiosity's instruments, an area where water once flowed and pooled, could have supported microbial life as it is known on Earth.

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"The key thing here is an environment a microbe could have lived in and might have even prospered in," John Grotzinger, the Mars Science Laboratory project scientist, said during a news conference at NASA Headquarters.

Answering questions later, he added that "we have found a habitable environment that is so benign and supportive of life that probably if this water was around and you had been on the planet, you would have been able to drink it."

Asked if Mars might have been habitable at the same time life was developing on Earth, Grotzinger said "we're talking about older than 3 billion years ago, and we're probably looking at a situation where plus or minus a couple of hundred million years, it's about the time we start seeing the first record of life preserved on Earth."

Exploring the rocky floor of Gale Crater near its landing site, Curiosity used its impact drill for the first time earlier this year, boring into fine-grain mudstone in an area known as Yellowknife Bay where water once flowed and percolated.

Powdered rock from the interior of the target mudstone then was fed into the rover's analytical instruments for a detailed chemical analysis.

It was the first time in the history of Mars exploration that pristine samples from the interior of a rock, unaffected by weathering and other environmental factors, have been collected.

Based on analysis by Curiosity's Chemistry and Mineralogy experiment (CheMin) and the Surface Analysis at Mars (SAM) instrument package, researchers believe they have detected the chemical signature -- sulfur, nitrogen, hydrogen, oxygen, phosphorus and carbon -- of a stream or lakebed environment that was habitable when the material was deposited.

"We've been able to take this to the next level of understanding whether or not Mars was habitable," said Michael Meyer, lead Mars scientist at NASA headquarters.

"It's not just a broad brush, oh yeah, there's water and yeah, there's rocks," he said. "We actually know ... water was there for a significant amount of time, that it was neutral, that it wasn't too salty. There was plenty of water for microorganisms to use, if they were there."

Grotzinger said the rover team will have to wait until May to take another drill sample because the positions of Earth and Mars in their orbits around the sun will make communications difficult during April.

Engineers also want to complete troubleshooting to figure out what caused a memory glitch with one of Curiosity's two redundant flight computers. Science operations have been suspended pending work to recover the corrupted memory and engineers are optimistic the problem will be resolved soon.

At least one additional drill sample is wanted to expand on the initial results and to help make sure any traces of Earth's environment that might have made it to Mars aboard Curiosity have been flushed from the system. Scientists also want to search for additional signs of organic carbon, one of the essential ingredients of life as it is known on Earth.

Depending on the results, additional samples could be collected, but Grotzinger said the team is eager to begin the long-awaited trek to Mount Sharp, a towering mound of sedimentary rock in the center of Gale Crater that remains the mission's primary objective.

"What we can do now, with the issue of habitability in the bag, we can undertake a more systematic search for a brighter carbon signal," Grotzinger said. "The search for organic carbon is an (objective) of this mission and you want to do this as deliberately as possible. You don't want to just wander around and try stuff out."

The problem is that "sometimes when you make these minerals and chemicals, they actually use the organics," Grotzinger said. "So they can be degraded. And then you leave the rock sitting around for a couple of billion years and it's getting bombarded by radiation.

"This is not a simple problem, and it's going to take us a while," he said. "But I think the mission is up to it, and we're really excited to get started on that now."

© 2013 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
  • William Harwood

    Bill Harwood has been covering the U.S. space program full-time since 1984, first as Cape Canaveral bureau chief for United Press International and now as a consultant for CBS News. He has covered more than 125 shuttle missions, every interplanetary flight since Voyager 2's flyby of Neptune, and scores of commercial and military launches. Based at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida, Harwood is a devoted amateur astronomer and co-author of "Comm Check: The Final Flight of Shuttle Columbia." You can follow his frequent status updates at the CBS News Space page.

21 Comments Add a Comment
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jaygonus says:
About time they come clean. They are trickling information out, because they think we can't handle the truth. Check out the Life magazine cover (they still own the rights) of the Mars Viking approach, replete with whispy clouds. They subsequently erased the clouds on their publicized photos. Clouds = water. They knew. What else are they hiding?
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audemus says:
This indeed is such an amazing chapter in this planet's exploration of it's nearby (relatively speaking ) neighborhood. My hat is OFF to the men and women whose intelligence and tenaciousness has blazed a brand-new, wide open trail to our many and varied stories. I can't wait for the next installation.

You say April is a rough month for communication betwixt Earth and Mars....i have a similar issue myself , only her name is Mary...Lol
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rwsmith29456 says:
That's a great accomplishment to obtain and analyze such a sample. Now if they can just find a microbe, or what's left of one.
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kbbpll says:
March issue of Scientific American had an interesting article regarding 2,100 different species of microbes traversing the upper troposphere - 12 miles above Earth's surface. There was life on Mars, and there still is. Meanwhile the Catholic church sends smoke signals and it's top news.
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Ulgnud says:
Interesting. Let's see what else they uncover. At least we know we can use Martian soil for growing plants now. Food and oxygen can be made on site.
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aintfakin says:
rumpyOldPhart says:
Cool! We MAY be able to put Slow_News out to pasture on Mars where he can't bother everyone!
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wont help
someone else will immediately pick up the slack. You are too easy a target
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retiredc says:
Mars is Earth 2000 years from now.
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gmcgmc says:
Yea, I really believe them! Get a life Scientists. Oh thats right, your being paid, so you have to report something.
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john92021 says:
in a million years a probe will land on earth and prove it once held life.
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gmcgmc says:
Yea, I really believe them! Get a life Scientists. Oh thats right, your being paid, so you have to report something.
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brooky22 replies:
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Go away you troll!
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