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Mars, NASA and Viking
NASA Viking 1 lander may have killed life on Mars, claims scientist
A German astrobiologist suggests that humans might have inadvertently wiped out Martian life nearly 50 years ago, during NASA’s Viking 1 mission, which saw two spacecraft land on Mars and conduct grou
NASA May Have Inadvertently Killed Life on Mars, Scientist Says
In all our explorations of
Mars
to date, no evidence has been found that meets the rigorous standards to claim that we have conclusively found life. But, decades ago in the 1970s, when the Viking landers became the first US mission to safely land on and ...
Is life on Mars destroyed? NASA's Viking mission new hypothesis challenges 50-year-old findings
NASA's Viking missions to Mars may have inadvertently eliminated Martian life. The missions used water in experiments to detect life. Astrobiologist D
Did NASA's Viking ‘kill life’ on Mars? Expert says, ‘It was so much like Earth…’
Dirk Schulze-Makuch believes NASA's Viking 1 may have harmed potential Martian life through its water-based detection methods.
Did NASA's Viking landers accidentally kill life on Mars? Why one scientist thinks so
Dirk Schulze-Makuch is a scientist who thinks NASA's Viking landers could have inadvertently destroyed the life they were searching for. In this Q&A, we ask why.
Scientist Says NASA Lander May Have Accidentally Killed Life on Mars
Astrobiologist Dirk Schulze-Makuch from the Technische Universität Berlin in Germany believes that humans may have unintentionally killed all life on Mars in the 1970s. NASA's Viking 1 mission in 1975 saw two spacecraft land on the Red Planet's surface and conduct an experiment involving mixing water and nutrients with collected soil samples.
Did NASA accidentally kill life on Mars?
An astrobiologist suggests that NASA's Viking missions in the 1970s may have inadvertently eliminated potential Martian life. The experiments, designed to detect life by introducing water, might have overwhelmed microbes adapted to Mars' hyperarid conditions.
TweakTown
16h
NASA could have already killed life on Mars during its experiment
TL;DR:
NASA
's Viking 1 spacecraft, which landed on
Mars
in 1975, aimed to test for life using water-based methods.
GB News on MSN
1h
Space travel breakthrough: Lasers could be key to unlocking 'clean' way to get to Mars
Scientists have revealed a new potential way of travelling to Mars using lasers. The technology is inspired by the way plants ...
Business Today
3h
'NASA killed life on Mars': Astrobiologist makes shocking claim about agency's 1976 mission
Despite decades of exploration, no conclusive evidence of life on
Mars
has been found—though past missions may have come ...
CNET on MSN
3d
NASA Mars Scientists Ponder 'Peculiar Pale Pebbles' Mystery
NASA's Perseverance Mars rover spots a scattering of bizarre bright white pebbles of a mysterious composition and origin.
5d
Real story behind Mars' 'otherworldly' wreckage captured by NASA probe
The images of the 'saucer' were caught by a NASA helicopter orbiting Mars, with experts on the technology used to snap it ...
3d
on MSN
Rock once forgotten in a drawer plays key part in dating water on Mars
Despite the team's success in dating the water-rock interaction, the researchers don't think Mars was teeming with water at ...
4h
Mars may have been habitable more recently than thought
Mars may have hosted life billions of years ago, a possibility that has long intrigued scientists. Now, new evidence suggests ...
21h
on MSN
What Elon Musk's influence on a Trump administration could mean for NASA and space
"Bottom line, somebody in the Trump administration is going to say 'we want NASA and the private sector to collectively, as ...
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