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Perseverance, the Mars 2020 rover, which is expected to land on the red planet in February
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of 2021. And one of its main jobs?
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Finding signs of ancient microbial life on Mars.
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But wait, haven't we already found signs?
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What more evidence do we need, and how much do we actually have so far?
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Now, before we get into actual life forms, we have to talk about water.
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Most astrobiologists agree that liquid water, or at least some kind of liquid solvent, is
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arguably the most important variable in our continued search for life everywhere, including on Mars.
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For a long time, the best image we had that indicated the prior presence of water was
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this picture.
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It's possible that this riverbed and canyon formation could have also resulted from wind
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flow, glacial ice, volcanic lava, or liquefied CO2, but experts believe that the best explanation
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for this very specific shape and pattern was repeatedly flowing water.
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There are lots of other convincing geological features on the surface of Mars that make
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a pretty strong case for the fact that the planet may have once had flowing, liquid water.
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Plus in 2012, the Curiosity Rover phoned home to tell us it had found and examined a number
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of rocks that we now know were exposed to water billions of years ago.
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But what about water on Mars that's liquid right now?
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The High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment or HiRISE camera aboard the Mars Reconnaissance
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Orbiter took pictures that showed us something we now call recurring slope linea,
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or RSL.
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These dark streaks seem to fluctuate over time, appearing to flow down steep Martian slopes.
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And this discovery made a huge splash at the time and was widely hailed as evidence of current
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water on Mars, but there are lots of voices who push back on this, saying it's unrealistic
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to imagine that Mars could support flowing liquid water when its atmosphere is so thin
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and so cold.
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And new work argues that instead of water, it could be granular flow of sand and dust
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that makes these marks.
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So the debate about whether RSL indicate current flowing water on Mars still continues today.
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There's also super cool evidence of liquid oceans inside Mars right now, but that's
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kinda a whole separate video.
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And say we put water to the side entirely...what evidence do we have of actual life forms on Mars?
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The biggest and most controversial is the infamous incident in 1996 when NASA announced
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they had found evidence of extraterrestrial life inside a meteorite that thudded to Earth
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from Mars.
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The 'proof'?
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The combination of minerals and carbon compounds inside the meteorite seemed remarkably similar
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in makeup and form to what some microbes produce here on Earth.
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That's what we call a biosignature.
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But in the years since, scientists have pointed out that non-living or abiotic processes are equally
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likely to have produced the same clumps of minerals that we were so excited to call fossilized
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evidence of life.
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Plus, follow-on work did find that the meteorite had been contaminated by Earth's bacteria once it got here.
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So...eh?
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Over twenty years later, the debate still rages on.
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But even though it didn't give us a particularly satisfying answer, this meteorite did ignite
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a very important conversation.
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See one of the issues here is that we don't have a very standard definition of what life is.
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And that makes finding definitive evidence of it...kinda hard.
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Other Martian missions have found traces of methane and formaldehyde on Mars, which are
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both produced by living things here on Earth...although they can be produced by non-living processes.
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And again, we have a kinda philosophical dilemma here because we only know how to look for
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the things we know about.
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It could be that life elsewhere in the solar system or the universe is marked by biosignatures that we
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don't know about or don't know how to look for... yet.
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And then there's the whole question of where did life on Mars come from?!
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I mean...existential issues abound.
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Now, given the fact that we've been studying Mars from home since the 1600s and from space
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since the 60s, what I've covered in this video is certainly not exhaustive.
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But it is a short summary of the most compelling evidence we currently have for
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life on Mars which...even after all that, are still just tiny hints on where to start.
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Nothing definite, but hopefully a good base from which to make progress.
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Now when it lands, Perseverance will be happily digging around in Mars' rocks for fossils, gathering samples
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to hang onto until future missions can hopefully ferry those samples back to Earth for further
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study.
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And it'll eventually be joined by the European-Russian ExoMars rover.
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Some scientists are also pushing for these bots to search for genetic signs of current
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life on Mars too!
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But whatever we look for, from the years past it's pretty clear that whatever we find is going
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to need to be really solid evidence before we make any solid claims, and it may require
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a whole re-imagining of our frameworks for—and classification of—life itself.
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Because as Carl Sagan said, “extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence”.
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Which, it's pretty safe to say, we haven't quite found...yet.
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If you want more info on all you could ever want to know about the Mars Rover, then check out
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this video here, and make sure you subscribe to Seeker for all your space exploration news
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and updates with our series Countdown to Launch.
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If you have questions about specific Mars discoveries, let us know down in the comments below.
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As always thanks for watching, and I'll see next time.