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Signs of Life on Mars: Biosignatures Revealed in Sapphire Canyon

Posted on 12/09/2025 at 18:36
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Minerales vinculados a vida en Marte, Signs of Life on Mars: Biosignatures Revealed in Sapphire Canyon
Signs of Life on Mars: Biosignatures Revealed in Sapphire Canyon - PHOTO SHUTTERSTOCK
  • Biosignatures Found on Mars Could be Sings of Life
  • Minerals Suggest Ancient Life
  • Perseverance Confirms Clear Evidence

On the arid surface of Mars, a discovery has once again reopened the oldest question in space exploration: was there life on the Red Planet?

NASA’s Perseverance rover has detected mineral structures in the Bright Angel outcrop that could be biosignatures—traces of past biological processes.

The sample, named Sapphire Canyon and collected in July 2024, provides the most convincing evidence to date that Mars may have once hosted ancient microorganisms.

“After a year of analysis, they came back and said: ‘Look, we didn’t find any other explanation,’” said Sean Duffy, NASA’s acting administrator, as he revealed the team’s results.

Duffy added that this could be “the clearest sign of life we’ve ever found on Mars, which is incredibly exciting.”

Minerals Linked to Life on Mars

Researchers identified vivianite and greigite in the rock, two minerals that on Earth are often formed by microbial activity in aquatic environments.

Joel Hurowitz, lead author of the study, explained that these minerals could be byproducts of microorganisms metabolizing organic matter in ancient Martian lakes.

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Every green speck, every patch of phosphate iron and metallic sulfides seems to narrate a remote biological process—a reminder that even the most hostile environments could have been stages for life.

On Earth, the presence of vivianite is often associated with deposits in swamps, lakes, and environments where microbes play a crucial role in chemical cycles.

That is why finding similar minerals on Mars constitutes a powerful signal, strengthening the biological hypothesis over purely geological explanations.

The Mysterious “Leopard Spots”

The discovery is not limited to a single rock.

The Perseverance rover also explored Cheyava Falls, where it detected patterns known as “leopard spots” and “poppy seeds.”

These tiny structures appear as dark circular dots and small specks embedded in rock, surrounded by white veins of calcium sulfate.

On our planet, these patterns are often linked to microbial activity that leaves behind mineralized traces over thousands of years.

However, scientists caution that they could also result from non-biological chemical reactions under extreme temperature conditions.

The debate between purely chemical and biological processes remains open, though the new data leaning toward the latter has fueled excitement in the scientific community.

New Samples in Bright Angel

More recently, analysis of the Sapphire Canyon and Masonic Temple samples, also extracted from Bright Angel, confirmed the presence of green specks of reduced minerals.

The uneven distribution of these minerals coincides with areas of higher concentration of organic compounds, reinforcing the idea that they may be potential biosignatures.

The study, published in Nature, notes that Bright Angel contains textures, chemical features, and organic signatures that “warrant being considered as potential biosignatures.”

Although cautious, these conclusions place the Perseverance mission at a turning point in the search for extraterrestrial life.

Each analysis opens new hypotheses and brings scientists closer to confirming that Mars was, at some point in its history, a habitable planet.

A Window Into Mars’ Past

Beyond individual discoveries, the greatest contribution of this research is the glimpse it provides into Mars’ distant past.

Billions of years ago, the planet hosted lakes, rivers, and water systems that may have supported microbial ecosystems similar to those of early Earth.

Today, those waters have evaporated or frozen beneath the surface, leaving minerals as silent witnesses of their interaction with living organisms.

Perseverance has carefully stored these samples for an eventual return to Earth, but budgetary and technical delays have postponed recovery missions.

In the meantime, the rocks remain sealed in titanium containers, waiting for future generations of scientists to analyze them in terrestrial laboratories.

Excitement in the Scientific Community

The enthusiasm is global, and experts from different universities have highlighted the significance of this discovery.

Sanjeev Gupta of Imperial College London emphasized: “This is the first time we see something that suggests: ‘This could have formed because of biological processes.’”

For that reason, he said, the Sapphire Canyon sample “is a sample we need to bring back” to confirm the hypotheses under more advanced conditions of analysis.

The race to answer whether we are alone in the universe is now being played out in Mars’ laboratories and, in the future, in Earth’s research centers.

Each new piece of data not only changes what we know about the Red Planet, but also redefines our own history as a species seeking company in the cosmos.

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