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MARSDAILY
Martian impact craters may be hiding life
by Staff Writers
Edinburgh, Scotland (UPI) Apr 16, 2012

disclaimer: image is for illustration purposes only

If there is life on Mars it may be lurking in craters formed by asteroid impacts on the planet's surface, as has happened on Earth, Scottish scientists say.

Researchers at the University of Edinburgh said organisms have been found living deep beneath a site in Chesapeake Bay in the United States where an asteroid crashed 35 million years ago, suggesting crater sites on other planets may be "hiding life."

Heat from such impacts would kill everything at the surface but fractures leading to rocks deep below could allow water and nutrients to flow in and support life.

"The deeply fractured areas around the impact craters can provide a safe haven in which microbes can flourish for long periods of time," researcher Charles Cockrell told the BBC.

Craters may provide shelter to microbes, shielding them from the effects of changing seasons and catastrophic events such as global warming or ice ages, he said.

"Our findings suggest that the subsurface of craters on Mars might be a promising place to search for evidence of life," he said.

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MARSDAILY
U.K. study: Mars surface too dry for life
London (UPI) Feb 3, 2012
Life could not exist on the surface of Mars because the planet has been in a "super-drought" lasting 600 million years, British researchers say. Scientists at Imperial College London said they based that assertion on analysis of Martian soil from the 2008 NASA Phoenix mission. Their three-year analysis suggests the Martian surface has been dry for such a lon ... read more


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