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Surprising Science

NASA’s Curiosity rover has found organic matter on Mars

NASA has found organic matter preserved in 3-billion-year-old mudstones at Gale crater on Mars. Is it just a matter of time before life is discovered on the red planet?
Curiosity began drilling again in May, 2018. (Image: NASA/JPL-Caltech/MSSS)

Today, in a much-anticipated announcement live-streamed by NASA, it announced both an abundance of organic molecules and seasonal, recurrent releases of methane gas into the atmosphere of planet Mars.


Organic molecules are the building blocks of life. According to Dictionary.com, the definition is:

“A molecule of the kind normally found in living systems. Organic molecules are usually composed of carbon atoms in rings or long chains, to which are attached other atoms of such elements as hydrogen, oxygen, and nitrogen.”


In this handout released by NASA, a Mars landscape is seen in a picture taken by the panoramic camera on the Mars Exploration Rover Spirit January 8, 2003. (Photo by NASA/Jet Propulsion Laboratory/Cornell University via Getty Images)

This does not mean life was discovered on Mars… yet. These organic molecules were found at the bottom of what once was a lake bed, in rocks 3 billion years old. The drill that Curiosity is using is literally just scratching the surface; it goes 5cm deep. So what if scientists were able to drill 10 meters, 100 meters, 1,000 meters? It’s tantalizing.

In addition, NASA recorded methane spikes on the planet Mars, in a form that is repeating rather than random. This is different from previous measurements of methane on Mars, which could not be repeated. This means they can be expected in certain cycles—seasonal, if you will—and therefore, tested. The gas creeps from below the surface up to be released into the Mars atmosphere via riverbeds, cracks, and crevices in the surface of the planet. What’s not yet clear is whether or not the methane is, indeed, biological.

The vast majority of methane on Earth, at least, has a biological origin, so its presence on Mars is significant to the possibility of actually discovering life on Mars.

The search for organic molecules actually began on Mars in 1976 via Viking 1 and II, so the finding of them by Curiosity is an achievement a long time coming. It follows the discovery of organic molecules in 2014 that appeared to be much more sparse.

The Curiosity rover has lasted three times as long as it was intended to and is still going, which helped with the study of seasonal methane cycles. 

Another mission, Mars InSight, is heading to Mars right now to study the geological life of the planet.

NASA’a live broadcast has ended, but you can see some of it replayed here:


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