"Even though there is proof of water on Mars, is it still possible for life to exist on Mars with the atmosphere consisting of mostly carbon dioxide?"
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Oxygen and Life in the Precambrian
The December 2006 issue of Geobiology is a collection of papers focusing on the history of Earth’s biogeochemistry, from the earliest sedimentary rocks in Greenland to the late Proterozoic. The rise of atmospheric oxygen provides a thematic link. The papers in this issue, edited by David Catling and Roger Buick of NAI’s University of Washington Alumni Team, grew out of a session of the Earth System Processes 2 conference in Calgary, Canada, 8–11 August 2005, sponsored by the NAI.
Source: [Link]
- NASA Chooses MAVEN as the Next Mars Scout Mission
- NASA's Carl Sagan Fellows to Study Extraterrestrial Worlds
- Looking for Life on Mars – in a Canadian Lake
- Mars Research in Polar Bear Country
- Iron Isotope Record Reflects Microbial Metabolism Through Time
- Silicate Mineralogy on Mars Indicates Wet Past
- Jack Hills Zircons: New Information About Earth's Earliest Crust
- ASTID Funds 15 New Projects
- Liquid Water in the Martian North? Maybe.
- Astrobiology Rap