Although Mars is quite dry and inhospitable today, our rovers continue to search for evidence of a past Mars that could have sustained life. A recent study suggests that, at least in Gale Crater, the opportunities for life to flourish may have been short-lived. In particular, the team looked at carbonates found by the Curiosity rover. These minerals contain varying amounts of carbon and oxygen isotopes that can hint at the conditions the carbonates formed under. The team found a high proportion of heavier isotopes, which suggest one of two possible formation paths. In the first, Gale Crater underwent wet-dry cycles that alternated between more- and less-habitable conditions for life. The second possibility is a cryogenic past, where most of the local water was locked in ice, and life would have had to survive — if possible — in small pockets of extremely salty water. Neither possibility is a great one for the kinds of life we’re accustomed to. (Image credit: NASA; research credit: D. Burtt et al.; via Gizmodo)
Seeking Mars’ Past
