Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

Tech & Science

Ancient microbial life could survive 50 million years in Martian ice

If life ever existed on Mars, its best hiding place may be frozen deep within the planet’s ice.

A file photo taken 27 August 2003 by NASA's Hubble Space Telescope shows Mars snapped within minutes of the planet's closest approach to Earth in nearly 60,000 years
A file photo taken 27 August 2003 by NASA's Hubble Space Telescope shows Mars snapped within minutes of the planet's closest approach to Earth in nearly 60,000 years - Copyright AFP OREN ZIV
A file photo taken 27 August 2003 by NASA's Hubble Space Telescope shows Mars snapped within minutes of the planet's closest approach to Earth in nearly 60,000 years - Copyright AFP OREN ZIV

Is there life on Mars? If life ever existed on Mars, its best hiding place may be frozen deep within the planet’s ice. This means, Mars’ frozen ice caps may be time capsules for ancient life.

This is at least according to science studies. Laboratory experiments show that key building blocks of proteins can survive tens of millions of years in pure ice, even under relentless cosmic radiation. Ice mixed with Martian-like soil, however, destroys organic material far more quickly.

The findings point future missions toward drilling into clean, buried ice rather than studying rocks or dirt.

Scientists from NASA Goddard Space Flight Center and Penn State successfully recreated Mars like conditions in the laboratory to test this idea. The scientists found that pieces of amino acids from Escherichia coli bacteria, if trapped in Martian permafrost or ice caps, could survive more than 50 million years even under constant cosmic radiation.

The findings suggest that missions searching for life on Mars should prioritise pure ice or ice rich permafrost instead of focusing mainly on rocks, clay, or soil.

Fifty million years is far greater than the expected age for some current surface ice deposits on Mars, which are often less than two million years old, meaning any organic life present within the ice would be preserved.

Simulating Mars and Cosmic Radiation in the Lab

The researchers sealed E. coli bacteria inside test tubes filled with pure water ice. Other samples were combined with water and materials commonly found in Martian sediment, including silicate based rocks and clay.

The frozen samples were placed in a gamma radiation chamber at Penn State’s Radiation Science and Engineering Center. The chamber was cooled to minus 60 degrees Fahrenheit to match temperatures in icy regions of Mars.

The bacteria were then exposed to radiation equivalent to 20 million years of cosmic ray bombardment on the Martian surface. Afterward, the samples were vacuum sealed and shipped back to NASA Goddard under cold conditions for amino acid testing. Researchers then modelled an additional 30 years of radiation exposure, bringing the total to 50 million years.

NASA’s Europa Clipper mission will study Europa’s ice shell and subsurface ocean. Europa is the fourth largest of Jupiter’s 95 moons. Europa Clipper launched in 2024 and is traveling 1.8 billion miles to reach Jupiter in 2030. The spacecraft will perform 49 close flybys to determine whether environments beneath the surface could support life.

Mars Dune Alpha Conceptual Render: Visualization on Mars.
Credit – ICON/NASA

What this means?

In pure water ice, more than 10 percent of the amino acids, which are the building blocks of proteins, survived the full 50 million year simulation. By contrast, samples mixed with Mars like sediment broke down 10 times faster and did not survive.

A 2022 study by the same team had shown that amino acids preserved in a mixture of 10% water ice and 90% Martian soil were destroyed more quickly than samples containing only sediment.

The researchers think the faster breakdown in mixed samples may happen because a thin film forms where ice touches minerals. That layer could allow radiation to move more freely and damage amino acids.

To demonstrate this, the team also tested organic material at temperatures similar to those on Europa, an icy moon of Jupiter, and Enceladus, an icy moon of Saturn. At those even colder temperatures, deterioration slowed down further.

The research features in the journal Astrobiology, titled “Slow Radiolysis of Amino Acids in Mars-Like Permafrost Conditions: Applications to the Search for Extant Life on Mars.”

Avatar photo
Written By

Dr. Tim Sandle is Digital Journal's Editor-at-Large for science news. Tim specializes in science, technology, environmental, business, and health journalism. He is additionally a practising microbiologist; and an author. He is also interested in history, politics and current affairs.

You may also like:

Business

Hundreds of companies raised a combined $70 billion by selling shares to the public in the United States last year.

Business

How much of your life will be or even can be run by you?

Business

Wall Street is licking its chops over an unprecedented slate of massive IPOs set to arrive in the coming months.

Business

Concerns about the Middle East crisis remain in May 2026. — © GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/AFP Michael HEIMANAnuj SRIVASIndia is scrambling to salvage a...