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Tag Archives: Tissint
Soluble salts in Mars meteorite came from martian brines similar to terrestrial seawater
[Editor’s note: From a paper by Elizabeth Jaramillo and four co-authors recently published in Geophysical Research Letters.] Indigenous Organic‐Oxidized Fluid Interactions in the Tissint Mars Meteorite • Results support hypothesis that indigenous fluids incorporated into Tissint fissures on Mars and … Continue reading
Naturally occurring ‘batteries’ fueled organic carbon synthesis on Mars
Mars’ organic carbon may have originated from a series of electrochemical reactions between briny liquids and volcanic minerals, according to new analyses of three Martian meteorites from a team led by Carnegie’s Andrew Steele published in Science Advances. The group’s … Continue reading
Posted in Reports
Tagged brines, Mars meteorites, Nakhla, NWA 1950, organic compounds, organic molecules, Tissint
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Is carbon in Mars meteorite Tissint biological?
Did Mars ever have life? Does it still? A meteorite from Mars has reignited the old debate. An international team that includes scientists from the École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne has published a paper in the scientific journal Meteoritics and … Continue reading
Mars has carbon — it’s just not biological
A highly detailed study of 11 meteorites that have come from Mars shows that although 10 of them contain the organic element carbon, the source of the carbon is not biological in origin. Instead, the carbon lies as molecules inside … Continue reading
Posted in Reports
Tagged ALH84001, atmosphere, carbon, Curiosity, Dar al Gani 476, Mars meteorites, Mars Science Laboratory, Tissint, Zagami
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