Monsters from outer space

SirUlli

Senior member
Jan 13, 2003
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Could martian research samples carry diseases? Seth Shostak hopes not

Aids, mad cow disease, and avian flu stalk the globe, and they're problem enough. But some space scientists are suggesting that a new menace might soon join the pantheon of pandemics threatening your bodily wellbeing: bugs from space.

The exotic warning appeared last week in Science, where researchers reported on discoveries made by Nasa's Mars Exploration Rovers. In the last year, these small, motorised geology labs have beamed back convincing evidence that water once formed pools and puddles on the red planet.

Ask any astrobiologist (yes, there are such people), and they will tell you that liquid water is the essential ingredient of life. So it's possible that when Mars was a kinder, gentler and wetter world, perhaps billions of years ago, single-celled living beings made an appearance there. Admittedly, contemporary Mars is brutally cold and dry. But those microbes - if they ever evolved - could still be around, pursuing a spartan lifestyle in underground aquifers.

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Seth Shostak is the senior astronomer at the Seti institute, California

Sir Ulli
 

Wiz

Diamond Member
Feb 5, 2000
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Brings to mind a lot of Sci-Fi stories where the silly humans brought back nifty rocks from Mars - only to be devastated by the bugs that somehow survived (cue Carl Sagan Voice...)

"Billions and Billions of years on the planet's surface"

Well, I really think we have to apply a healthy dose of Murphy's law to these things and just not do it.
If there ever was a civilsation of any kind on Mars it's dean now for some reason, maybe biological?
IMHO Mars should be studied on Mars, at least until we are really sure nothing there can hurt us.
I would even accept sending a probe, collecting Mars stuff & bringing it back to a space station for study.
But I think we are a long way from being able to bring it back to Earth with absolute assurance that "nothing could go wrong".
Healthy paranoia can save us a lot of potential trouble.
 

JarrodH

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Aug 19, 2004
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We do need to be carefull. They did do a study a while ago in one of the deserts in the US to see if anything was alive in the dirt. They did find bateria that was in a dormant state. This desert gets very little if any rain during the year.
 

Soggysocks

Golden Member
Jun 20, 2001
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Originally posted by: Wiz
Brings to mind a lot of Sci-Fi stories where the silly humans brought back nifty rocks from Mars - only to be devastated by the bugs that somehow survived (cue Carl Sagan Voice...)

"Billions and Billions of years on the planet's surface"

Well, I really think we have to apply a healthy dose of Murphy's law to these things and just not do it.
If there ever was a civilsation of any kind on Mars it's dean now for some reason, maybe biological?
IMHO Mars should be studied on Mars, at least until we are really sure nothing there can hurt us.
I would even accept sending a probe, collecting Mars stuff & bringing it back to a space station for study.
But I think we are a long way from being able to bring it back to Earth with absolute assurance that "nothing could go wrong".
Healthy paranoia can save us a lot of potential trouble.



Whats the Prob? We all came from Mars anyway....................at least us Guys did :D