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1.
Sci Adv ; 10(30): eadm7499, 2024 Jul 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39058782

ABSTRACT

Mars' water history is fundamental to understanding Earth-like planet evolution. Water escapes to space as atoms, and hydrogen atoms escape faster than deuterium giving an increase in the residual D/H ratio. The present ratio reflects the total water Mars has lost. Observations with the Mars Atmosphere and Volatile Evolution (MAVEN) and Hubble Space Telescope (HST) spacecraft provide atomic densities and escape rates for H and D. Large increases near perihelion observed each martian year are consistent with a strong upwelling of water vapor. Short-term changes require processes in addition to thermal escape, likely from atmospheric dynamics and superthermal atoms. Including escape from hot atoms, both H and D escape rapidly, and the escape fluxes are limited by resupply from the lower atmosphere. In this paradigm for the escape of water, the D/H ratio of the escaping atoms and the enhancement in water are determined by upwelling water vapor and atmospheric dynamics rather than by the specific details of atomic escape.

2.
Sci Rep ; 8(1): 4790, 2018 Mar 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29540818

ABSTRACT

A correction to this article has been published and is linked from the HTML and PDF versions of this paper. The error has not been fixed in the paper.

3.
Sci Rep ; 7(1): 4008, 2017 06 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28638074

ABSTRACT

The environmental conditions on the Earth before 4 billion years ago are highly uncertain, largely because of the lack of a substantial rock record from this period. During this time interval, known as the Hadean, the young planet transformed from an uninhabited world to the one capable of supporting, and inhabited by the first living cells. These cells formed in a fluid environment they could not at first control, with homeostatic mechanisms developing only later. It is therefore possible that present-day organisms retain some record of the primordial fluid in which the first cells formed. Here we present new data on the elemental compositions and mineral fingerprints of both Bacteria and Archaea, using these data to constrain the environment in which life formed. The cradle solution that produced this elemental signature was saturated in barite, sphene, chalcedony, apatite, and clay minerals. The presence of these minerals, as well as other chemical features, suggests that the cradle environment of life may have been a weathering fluid interacting with dry-land silicate rocks. The specific mineral assemblage provides evidence for a moderate Hadean climate with dry and wet seasons and a lower atmospheric abundance of CO2 than is present today.


Subject(s)
Archaea/chemistry , Bacteria/chemistry , Clay/chemistry , Minerals/chemistry , Climate , Earth, Planet , Environment , Prokaryotic Cells/chemistry , Silicates/chemistry
4.
Astrobiology ; 13(3): 294-302, 2013 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23406344

ABSTRACT

Early in its history, Earth's surface developed from an uninhabitable magma ocean to a place where life could emerge. The first organisms, lacking ion transporters, fixed the composition of their cradle environment in their intracellular fluid. Later, though life adapted and spread, it preserved some qualities of its initial environment within. Modern prokaryotes could thus provide insights into the conditions of early Earth and the requirements for the emergence of life. In this work, we constrain Earth's life-forming environment through detailed analysis of prokaryotic intracellular fluid. Rigorous assessment of the constraints placed on the early Earth environment by intracellular liquid will provide insight into the conditions of abiogenesis, with implications not only for our understanding of early Earth but also the formation of life elsewhere in the Universe.


Subject(s)
Cytoplasm/chemistry , Environment , Inorganic Chemicals/analysis , Origin of Life , Atmosphere/chemistry , Bacteria/cytology , Bacteria/metabolism , Carbon Dioxide/analysis , Cations , Elements , Hydrothermal Vents/chemistry , Methane/analysis , Models, Theoretical , Oceans and Seas , Seawater/chemistry
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