| Oct. 11th, 2002 - NASA Press
Release
Kathleen Burton
NASA Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, Calif.
Phone: 650/604-1731 or 604-9000
E-mail: kburton@mail.arc.nasa.gov
Diane Richards
SETI Institute, Mountain View, Calif.
Phone: 650/960-4513
E-mail: drichards@seti.org
RELEASE: 02-109AR
NOTE TO EDITORS AND NEWS DIRECTORS: You are invited
to an informal media opportunity with Dr. Nathalie
Cabrol and members of the Licancabur expedition
team on Oct. 15 from 9: 45 a.m. to 10:45 a.m.
in the Visitor’s Center at NASA Ames Research
Center. To reach Ames, take the Moffett Field
exit off Highway 101 and drive east to the main
gate. Turn left before the main gate onto R.T.
Jones St., proceed less than half a mile, and
turn right into the Visitor’s Center parking
lot.
NASA Astrobiologists to study
extreme life at Earht's highest lake
Scientists from NASA, the SETI Institute and
other organizations are preparing to ascend nearly
4 miles to the summit of a dormant volcano in
the Chilean Andes to find out how the organisms
that live there can survive in the volcano's hostile
environment.
During October, the scientists will explore several
lakes in the region, including the highest freshwater
lake in the world, in the caldera of the Licancabur
volcano, almost 20,000 feet high. The information
they gather will help astrobiologists devise strategies
and technologies to search for life on planets
like Mars during future missions.
“If there was life on Mars 3.5 billion
years ago, it could have used defense mechanisms
similar to those used by the organisms at Licancabur
volcano to survive," said expedition principal
investigator Dr. Nathalie Cabrol of the SETI Institute
and NASA Ames Research Center. "This expedition
and the follow-up mission in 2003 will provide
critical astrobiological information about the
limits of life on our planet,” Cabrol said.
“It also will give us clues about which
planets are good candidates to search for life
and help in the design of future mission strategies
and technologies for exploring ancient martian
paleolakes or oceans on Europa.” A moon
of Jupiter, Europa is believed by some scientists
to contain a subsurface ocean of water.
Although the lake at Licancabur volcano is covered
with almost 2 feet of ice during much of the year,
the expedition will take place in the southern
hemisphere’s spring, when the lake is not
completely frozen. The researcher-divers will
not use oxygen during their dives, but will have
oxygen cylinders onboard a nearby dive boat as
a backup precaution. The NASA Ames Safety, Environment
and Mission Assurance Directorate has conducted
an independent review of the Licancabur mission
to ensure safety compliance.
The site research will answer three questions
critical to astrobiology and space exploration,
Cabrol explained -- How do the organisms there
survive in such a low-oxygen, high-ultraviolet
radiation environment? What are the limits of
life on Earth? Why does the water at the bottom
of the volcano's lake remain liquid when most
of the lake's surface is frozen much of the year?
To find answers to these questions, the scientists
plan to study the life forms that live in the
lake, such as microrganisms and plankton. These
'extremophiles' thrive at Licancabur, one of the
most Mars-like analogs on Earth.
Another stressor on the life forms at the volcano
is low atmospheric pressure, said Cabrol. Because
of the volcano's high altitude, the atmospheric
pressure is two times lower than at sea level.
Researchers also hope to learn how the lake itself
survives, given that the volcano is in the Atacama
desert, one of the driest places on Earth.
The scientists will dive to the lake's bottom
to find some of the answers. The researchers theorize
that the lake's water temperature may remain warm
at the bottom because of heat transferred from
the volcano. "Only by going there will we
find out," said Cabrol.
Research during the 25-day mission, which begins
Oct. 16, will include mapping the crater's geology
and topography, surveying the depth, topography
and temperature of the lake bottom, characterizing
the lake's organisms and testing a two-wheeled
Mars mini-rover concept.
Samples returned from the lake during the mission
will be transferred to a support team of scientists
who will begin preliminary analysis in the nearby
town of Antofagasta. Most samples, however, will
be flown to the United States for testing.
Cabrol will give brief interviews from the volcano’s
summit using a satellite phone during the expedition
on Oct. 24 and Nov. 1. Interviews will take place
between 9 a.m. and 10 a.m. PDT. To arrange an
interview, please e-mail Kathleen Burton at kburton@mail.arc.nasa.gov
by Oct. 17.
The team also includes Dr. Chris McKay and Marcus
Murbach of NASA Ames, Drs. Imre Friedman, Edmond
Grin , Edna DeVore and Roseli Friedman of NASA
Ames and the SETI Institute, Drs. Guillermo Chong,
Cecilia Demergasso, Lorena Escudero and Cristian
Tambley from the Universidad Catolica del Norte
in Antofagasta, Chile, David Fike from the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology, Andrew Hock from the
University of California at Los Angeles, Dr. Keeve
Kiss from the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Dr.
Isivan Grigorsky from Kossuth Lajos University
in Hungary and Brian Grigsby from the Schreder
Planetarium.
With grant support from NASA, administrative
support from the SETI Institute and funding from
Project ARISE and the Shasta County Office of
Education, the project has established a Web site
that will let teachers, students and members of
the public take a virtual field trip to Licancabur.
Details are available at: www.extremeenvironment.com
Project
ARISE (Advanced Rural Integrated Science Education)
is a federally funded science professional development
project for K-12 educators based in Shasta County,
Calif.
Details are available at: www.shastalink.k12.ca.us/scoe
The Licancabur expedition is funded primarily
by NASA Ames Research Center and the NASA IDEAS
(Initiative to Develop Education through Astronomy
and Space Science) grant program, an education
and outreach public grant program administered
by the Space Telescope Science Institute, Baltimore,
Md.
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