CANBERRA, Jan. 24 (Xinhua) -- A team of researchers has found what may once have been the most liveable mud on Mars, the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization ( CSIRO), Australia's leading scientific research body, said on Friday.
Some of the oldest minerals ever analyzed by NASA's Mars Opportunity Rover show that around four billion years ago Mars had liquid water so fresh it could have supported life.
The findings were announced in a special "Exploring Mars Habitability" edition of the journal Science released Friday to coincide with the 10th anniversary of the Mars Opportunity Rover and its twin, Spirit, landing on the red planet.
CSIRO's Dr. Paulo de Souza, who is on the science team led by Cornell University's Professor Steven Squyres, said a major focus on NASA's decade of research on Mars surface was whether the planet may ever have been habitable.
"While Mars is too cold now to have the liquid water needed for life, we've had evidence for past water activity on the planet from satellite images of valleys and analysis of rocks by the Rovers," de Souza said.
"But the water that once shaped those landscapes and minerals was as acidic as vinegar."
Latest research has found not only the earliest episode of water activity documented yet by the Opportunity Rover, but that the geochemistry of the 4 billion years old rocks indicates extensive deposits of past water that's among the freshest, most life-sustaining found so far anywhere on Mars.
"If there was ever life on Mars, then this would have been the mud for it to live in," he said.
De Souza is a Science Leader at CSIRO in micro-sensors and has worked with NASA since the Mars Exploration Rover Program began, having collaborated with NASA's research teams for many years.
Opportunity's Mars mission was expected to last just months but she's still going strong 10 years on with no signs of stopping. She's traveled 38 km instead of the few hundred meters planned.
Opportunity has collected invaluable information about Mars' surface with her high tech toolkit of rock scrapers, chemical sensors, and spectral analyzers, de Souza said.
She's been beaming a decade's worth of data back to space receiving stations on Earth, including the Canberra Deep Space Communication Center outside the Australian national capital managed by CSIRO.
"Thanks to the Rovers, we now have a much richer knowledge of our nearest planet and where to focus our future search for microfossils, present water and other signs of life," de Souza said.