Mars Toxin Dims Hopes for Red Planet Life

Rocket fuel chemical found is soil, but could be from Earth
By Kevin Spak,  Newser Staff
Posted Aug 5, 2008 8:55 AM CDT
Mars Toxin Dims Hopes for Red Planet Life
Four Wet Chemistry Laboratory units are seen on board the Phoenix Mars Lander on Aug. 4, 2007, before the Phoenix was launched into space.   (AP Photo)

The Phoenix lander has found a toxin in Mars soil that considerably decreases the odds of finding Martian life, Science.com reports. The chemical, perchlorate, is a harsh oxidizing agent often used in solid rocket fuel, so researchers are double checking to ensure it wasn’t carried from Earth. The results are especially surprising because Sunday’s tests revealed no sign of perchlorate.

"Initial analyses suggested Earth-like soil. Further analysis has revealed un-Earthlike aspects of the soil chemistry," says the project's principal investigator. Adds the Phoenix project manager: “When surprising results are found, we want to review and assure our extensive pre-launch contamination control processes covered this potential.” Even if the perchlorate is native to Mars, it wouldn’t totally rule out the possibility that life once existed, or still exists deep underground. (More red planet stories.)

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