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MARSDAILY
NASA picks spot to probe for life on Mars
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) July 22, 2011

NASA on Friday announced which crater it has picked for the 2.5 billion dollar Mars rover, Curiosity, to probe for signs of life when the unmanned vehicle is lowered onto the red planet next year.

The six-wheeled mechanical science lab will explore a crater called Gale, which contains a mountain and will help scientists study clay and sulfate deposits at various heights.

"Scientists identified Gale as their top choice to pursue the ambitious goals of this new rover mission," said Jim Green, director for the Planetary Science Division at NASA Headquarters in Washington.

"The site offers a visually dramatic landscape and also great potential for significant science findings."

The unchosen option was a crater called Eberswalde, a clay-bearing site where a river once flowed into a lake.

No one expects the rover, also known as the Mars Science Laboratory (MSL), to actually find living beings there, just signs that that some microbial life may have existed in the depths of a crater that may have contained water.

NASA has previously sent the Spirit and Opportunity rovers to explore Mars and has set its sights on sending humans there by 2030.

The launch of Curiosity is set for later this year, with its arrival expected in August 2012.

Since it is larger than previous rovers, the car-sized vehicle will be lowered onto Mars with the help of a rocket-powered sky crane.

The announcement of Curiosity's exact destination came 35 years after the first spacecraft, the Viking 1, landed on Mars in July 1976.




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MARSDAILY
Islands of Life - Part One
Moffett Field CA (SPX) Jun 29, 2011
Southern Atacama Desert, Chile - Sunday, May 8, 2011 - This is the first of a series of reports from my recent trip to the Atacama Desert. I traveled with a group of scientists, headed by Jacek Wierzchos, of the National Museum of Natural Science in Madrid, who go to the Atacama to study microorganisms that live at the dry limit of life on Earth. Because the Atacama is so dry, and has been ... read more


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