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  • Shallow transient liquid water environments on present-day Mars, and their implications for life.

    Paper number

    IAC-17,A1,6,4,x36883

    Author

    Dr. Eriita Jones, University of South Australia, Australia

    Year

    2017

    Abstract
    The identification and characterisation of subsurface liquid water environments on Mars are of high scientific interest.  Such environments have the potential to support microbial life, and, more broadly, to develop our understanding of the habitability of planets and moons beyond Earth.  Given our current state of knowledge of life on Earth, three pre-requisites are necessary for an environment to be considered ‘habitable’ and therefore capable of supporting terrestrial-like life: energy, biogenic elements, and liquid water with a sufficiently high water activity.  The surface of Mars today is predominately cold and dry, and any liquid water exposed to the atmosphere will vaporise or freeze on timescales of hours to days.  These conditions have likely persisted for much of the last 10 million years, and perhaps longer.  Despite this, briny liquid water flows (Recurrent Slope Linea) have been observed in a number of locations in the present-day.  This talk will examine evidence from the Phoenix Lander (2008) and the Mars Science Laboratory (2012-current), to assess the occurrence of habitable conditions in the shallow Martian regolith.  This talk will argue that shallow, transient, liquid water brines are potentially habitable by microbial life, are likely a widespread occurrence on Mars, and that future exploration aimed at finding present-day habitable conditions and potential biology should ‘follow the salt’.
    Abstract document

    IAC-17,A1,6,4,x36883.brief.pdf

    Manuscript document

    IAC-17,A1,6,4,x36883.pdf (🔒 authorized access only).

    To get the manuscript, please contact IAF Secretariat.