Mars: Life, Subglacial Oceans, Abiogenic Photosynthesis, Seasonal Increases and Replenishment of Atmospheric Oxygen

Author:

Joseph Rhawn G.1,Duxbury Natalia S.2,Kidron Giora J.3,Gibson Carl H.4,Schild Rudolph5

Affiliation:

1. Astrobiology Research Center, Stanford, California, The United States of America

2. Dept, of Physics and Astronomy, George Mason University, VA, TheUnited States of America

3. Institute of Earth Sciences, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel

4. Scripps Center for Astrophysics and Space Sciences; Dept. Aerospace Engineering, University of California, San Diego, TheUnited States of America

5. Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics (Emeritus), Cambridge, MA, TheUnited States of America

Abstract

AbstractThe discovery and subsequent investigations of atmospheric oxygen on Mars are reviewed. Free oxygen is a biomarker produced by photosynthesizing organisms. Oxygen is reactive and on Mars may be destroyed in 10 years and is continually replenished. Diurnal and spring/summer increases in oxygen have been documented, and these variations parallel biologically induced fluctuations on Earth. Data from the Viking biological experiments also support active biology, though these results have been disputed. Although there is no conclusive proof of current or past life on Mars, organic matter has been detected and specimens resembling green algae / cyanobacteria, lichens, stromatolites, and open apertures and fenestrae for the venting of oxygen produced via photosynthesis have been observed. These life-like specimens include thousands of lichen-mushroom-shaped structures with thin stems, attached to rocks, topped by bulbous caps, and oriented skyward similar to photosynthesizing organisms. If these specimens are living, fossilized or abiogenic is unknown. If biological, they may be producing and replenishing atmospheric oxygen. Abiogenic processes might also contribute to oxygenation via sublimation and seasonal melting of subglacial water-ice deposits coupled with UV splitting of water molecules; a process of abiogenic photosynthesis that could have significantly depleted oceans of water and subsurface ice over the last 4.5 billion years.

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Subject

Space and Planetary Science,Astronomy and Astrophysics

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