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June 30, 2008

Astrobiology Science News 30 June 2008

June 28, 2008

Astrobiology Science News 28 June 2008

June 27, 2008

NAI Director's Seminar

"The CheMin mineralogical instrument on the MSL mission and the field-portable TERRA version available for NAI field campaigns"

Speaker: David Blake
Date/Time: Monday, June 30, 2008 11:00AM Pacific

Abstract: Dr. Blake will describe the Mars Science Laboratory (MSL) '09 mission and its CheMin XRD/XRF instrument. A terrestrial field-deployable version of CheMin (called "TERRA") will be available to perform in situ analyses during NAI field campaigns. The TERRA instrument has already been proven to be invaluable on field expeditions to Spitsbergen (Norway), the dry valleys of Antarctica, Canada (twice), and Rio Tinto (Spain).

TERRA instruments will be provided (for the cost of shipment and refurbishment) to any funded NAI field campaign. This "loaner XRD" program, which we call "Johnny Appleseed CheMin," will provide definitive mineralogical identifications for NAI field campaigns, as well as help to create a database of minerals in rocks and soils for use with MSL'09. A further benefit to the program is that a large number of Astrobiologists will become familiar with CheMin XRD data and will be able to contribute to the interpretations of rocks and soils analyzed by the CheMin flight instrument during MSL '09.

For more information and participation instructions: http://astrobiology.nasa.gov/nai/seminars/detail/127

[Source: NAI Newsletter]

NAI/APS Lewis and Clark Fund for Exploration and Field Research Recipients Announced

The NAI is pleased to announce the recipients of the 2008 Lewis and Clark Fund for Exploration and Field Research in Astrobiology:

Benjamin Black
Stanford University
Examining the Evidence for Early Life and Environments in the Barberton Greenstone Belt, South Africa

Barbara Cavalazzi
Portland State University
3D Electron Tomography of Extreme Environments Fossil Microbes (Rio Salado, Chile): The Problem of Biogenicity and its Detection

Jackie Denson
University of Arkansas, Fayetteville
Lake Magadi, Kenya; A Survey of the Microbial Diversity and Microbial Biomarkers Associated with Growth of Microorganisms along Alkaline Gradients in a Saline Rift Valley System

Emiley Eloe
Scripps Institution of Oceanography
Influence of High Hydrostatic Pressure on Microbial Communities from the Puerto Rico Trench

Ian Johnson
Pennsylvania State University
The Earth's Oldest (~3.4 Ga) Paleosol, North Polar Dome region of the Pilbara Craton, Australia

Michael Meyer
University of South Florida, Tampa
Morphological Change Through Time in the Ediacaran Fossil, Pteridinium

Kristen Myshrall
University of Connecticut
Evaluating the Microbial Constituents and their Metabolisms in Modern Thrombolites: A tool for Interpreting Life on the Ancient Earth and Searching for Life Beyond

Jorge Nunez
Arizona State University
Mineralogy. Microtexture and Microbial Biosignatures of Siliceous Hydrothermal Spring Deposits in New Zealand , with Applications to Mars Exploration

Noah Planavsky
University of California, Riverside
Sulfur Isotopes in Paleoproterozoic Carbonates: The Key to Understanding Post Oxygenation Chemical Oceanography

For more information: http://astrobiology.nasa.gov/nai/funding/lewis-and-clark

Enzyme's Active Site Revealed

A new study from NAI's Montana State University Team appears in the current issue of the Journal of the American Chemical Society. The study probes the hydrogenase enzyme, a large, complex enzyme which plays a major role in anaerobic metabolism by creating molecular hydrogen. The research team produced a crystal structure of the enzyme to unprecedented resolution, revealing a new level of detail in the enzyme's active site, and providing clues about it's evolution. These results further our understanding of the transition from the abiotic (non-living) world to the biological world which may have been an early event in the development of life on Earth, and possibly a common feature of life elsewhere in the universe. [Source: NAI Newsletter]

Shallow Water Origin of Life?

Astrobiologists hypothesize that shallow water, not deep water, may have cradled the planet's first life; that the dark, carbon-poor depths offered little energy to emerging life. But the newfound abundance of seafloor microbes makes it theoretically possible that early life thrived - and maybe even began - on the seafloor. "Some might even favor the deep ocean for the emergence of life since it was a bastion of stability compared with the surface, which was constantly being blasted by comets and other objects," suggests study author and NAI member Katrina Edwards in the University of Southern California press release. For images and resources, see NSF's press page. [Source: NAI Newsletter]

Seafloor Microbes Abundant and Thriving ... An Alternative Cradle for Life?

Researchers from NAI's Marine Biological Laboratory Team continue their study of the deep biosphere, reporting the latest results in Nature. This new study reveals that bacterial communities dwelling on ocean-bottom rocks are more abundant and diverse than previously thought, especially relative to the overlying water column. The microbes appear to ?feed? on the oceanic crust through seawater-rock alteration reactions involving the oxidation and hydration of glassy basalt. [Source: NAI Newsletter]

Novel Species of Bacteria Found Deep Within Greenland Glacier

Researchers from NAI's Penn State Team announced at the American Society of Microbiology General Meeting in Boston their discovery of a novel species of ultra-small bacteria that has survived for more than 120,000 years within the ice of a Greenland glacier at a depth of nearly two miles. The species is related genetically to certain bacteria found in fish, marine mud, and the roots of some plants, yet it has persisted in a low-temperature, high-pressure, reduced-oxygen, and nutrient-poor habitat. The study's authors speculate that it's unusual size helped enable it's survival in the ice for so long. [Source: NAI Newsletter]

Astrobiology Science News 27 June 2008

June 26, 2008

Erosion on Earth and Mars: Mere Seepage or Megaflood?

Researchers from NAI's University of California, Berkeley Team have a new study in Science focused on Box Canyon in Idaho. Incised into a basaltic plain with no drainage network upstream, and approximately 10 cubic meters per second of seepage emanating from its vertical headwall, the canyon is a veritable poster child of groundwater seepage erosion. But this new study posits evidence that the canyon?s formation was caused rather by catastrophic megaflood 45,000 years ago. Their results imply that flooding of this kind may have caused similar features on Mars. [Source: NAI Newsletter]

NAI Minority Institution Research Support Program

The NAI congratulates the faculty sabbatical awardees for the NAI MIRS program for 2008. They are:

Dr. Prabhakar Misra, Professor of Physics and Astronomy at Howard University, who will be working with Dr. Paul Mahafft at NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, on a project entitled "Spectroscopy and Analytical Protocols for Organic Molecules of Relevance to the Origin of Life on Mars and Earth."

Dr. Erik Melchiorre, Associate Professor of Geology, California State University, San Bernardino, who will work with Drs. Karen Meech, Mike Mottl and Jim Cowen at the University of Hawaii, at Manoa. His study is entitled, "Planetary Habitability and the Origins of Life: Evaluation of Mineralogical Evidence for Extremophile Colonization within Terrestrial Subduction Zones. "

For more information about the NAI MIRS program see http://astrobiology.nasa.gov/nai/funding/nai-minority-institution-research-support [Source: NAI Newsletter]

NAI Twitters and Tweets

Do you Tweet? If so, then you'll be happy to know that you can now follow an @AstrobiologyNAI Twitter stream. If you don't have any idea what the first two sentences in this article are about, keep reading! They refer to a micro-blogging tool called "Twitter," an increasingly popular, instant-messaging service that is quickly becoming the place where news breaks first, outpacing mainstream media.

Individual blog entries in Twitter are called "Tweets," and are limited to 140 characters, based on the premise that short messages will be to the point, and will be posted frequently. Twitter users post short messages and can choose to "follow" other users, and information can be sent and received on the web, by phone, or through instant messaging. Wondering how all this might be useful? Consider the fact that Mars Phoenix first announced the recent finding of water ice on Mars by a Tweet, and as of this writing has over 26,000 online followers, more than CNN Breaking News.

We'll be Tweeting the latest NAI and astrobiology news. Follow us at http://twitter.com/AstrobiologyNAI. [Source: NAI Newsletter]

Astrobiology Science News 26 June 2008

June 25, 2008

Astrobiology Science News 25 June 2008

Australian Centre for Astrobiology

The Australian Centre for Astrobiology has, after a period of transition, moved its headquarters from Macquarie University to the University of New South Wales (UNSW), also in Sydney. Its new web address is http://aca.unsw.edu.au. Its Director remains Prof Prof. Malcolm Walter (malcolm.walter@unsw.edu.au). The new Deputy Director is Prof. Brett Neilan (b.neilan@unsw.edu.au) whose research interests include the molecular biology and functional microbiology of stromatolite systems, and the toxins of cyanobacteria.

Our research areas will continue to focus on microbiology, palaeobiology, organic geochemistry, planetary science, astronomy and science communication. As yet we are not running an undergraduate astrobiology course such as that we ran in the past, but expect to do so soon. We are actively seeking advanced students and post-doctoral researchers in the fields listed above and scholarship opportunities are available. In certain circumstances we can accept interns. Current active research includes the geological evidence for early life on Earth, the microbiology of analogous modern systems (particularly those including archaea and extremophiles), biomarker geochemistry of modern and ancient environments, infrared sensing of Venus and Mars using ground-based telescopes, the search for extrasolar planets, and science communication and education within the framework of astrobiology. Collaborative research opportunities are actively sought.

Our formal link to the NASA Astrobiology Institute offers students many opportunities to work in the US, and our links to the European Space Agency and other astrobiology groups, particularly that in Spain, are also strong and lead to stimulating opportunities.

Any astrobiologists in, near or passing through Sydney should contact us and offer a seminar, or just visit to discuss more of mutual interest. All will be welcome. Seminars and visitors will be advertised on our website.

For information please first consult our website and then the Director, Malcolm Walter.

Malcolm Walter [Source: NAI Newsletter]

NASA Posdoctoral Program

Applications are due on July 1, 2008 for the NASA Postdcoctoral Program. The NAI will also be participating in the next cycle of applications, due November 1. More information can be found at http://astrobiology.nasa.gov/nai/funding/nai-postdoctoral-fellowship-program/ [Source: NAI Newsletter]

June 20, 2008

Astrobiology Science News 20 June 2008

June 19, 2008

Astrobiology Science News 19 June 2008

June 18, 2008

Astrobiology Science News 18 June 2008

June 17, 2008

The Astrobiology of Icy Worlds

Overview:

The 2008 Summer School program will be focussed on the exploration of icy worlds orbiting the giant planets of our Solar System. These satellites are important astrobiology targets in the exploration plans of space agencies as refl ected in the successes of the Galileo mission to Jupiter and the Cassini-Huygens mission to Saturn.

The study of the icy worlds provides an interesting and different astrobiological perspective than the study of Mars, a terrestrial planet whose characteristics are more similar to our own planetary environment. In contrast, the icy worlds of the outer solar system offer compositions and processes distinct from those of the terrestrial planets.

The priority for exploring icy worlds derives from indications that they can develop potentially habitable environments, or ones in which prebiotic chemistry may occur. Special outstanding examples are: Europa, which shows evidence for a water ocean in its interior, probably in contact with a rocky substrate which could provide heat and chemical compounds; Enceladus, which may also have some subsurface water, and which is the source of geysers spewing material into space; and Titan, which exhibits a methane hydrologic cycle and an atmosphere similar in some ways to that thought to have been present on the primitive Earth. Some of these icy worlds have been very active, and as the examples given illustrate, some still are. This activity is manifested in resurfacing by tectonism and volcanism to form geological structures sometimes different from and sometimes strikingly reminiscent of those on Earth. These structures are indicators of the planetary energy sources that are requisite for developing

School Topics

  • Cassini Flyby of Enceladus NASA/JPL
  • Saturn and its Small Icy Worlds - Torrence Johnson, NASA-JPL, USA
  • Astrobiology of Titan and Enceladus - Francois Raulin, Universites Paris, France
  • Astrobiology of Europa - Daniel Prieur, Universite de Brest, France
  • Jupiter and its Moons - Michel Blanc, Ecole Polytechnique, France
  • Europa and the Galilean Moons - Kevin Hand, Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology, USA
  • Mission Development - Alvaro Gimenez Canete, Centro de Astrobiologia, Spain
  • NAI Research on Icy Worlds - Carl Pilcher, NASA Astrobiology Institute, USA
  • Synthetic Life - Juan Perez Mercader, Centro de Astrobiologia, Spain
  • Plus Round Table Discussions, Student Projects, Night Sky Observations, and a half-day Field Trip to a nearby K-T Boundary Section

More information

Astrobiology Science News 17 June 2008

June 16, 2008

The NASA Astrobiology Institute is now Twittering

The NASA Astrobiology Institute is now Twittering at AstrobiologyNAI

Astrobiology Science News 16 June 2008

June 15, 2008

Astrobiology Science News 15 June 2008

June 13, 2008

Astrobiology Science News 13 June 2008

June 11, 2008

Astrobiology Science News 11 June 2008

June 10, 2008

Astrobiology Science News 10 June 2008

June 6, 2008

NASA Research Announcement (NRA) NNH08ZTT003N "Research Opportunities for Fundamental Space Biology Investigations in Microbial, Plant and Cell Biology"

The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) Headquarters has released NASA Research Announcement (NRA) NNH08ZTT003N entitled "Research Opportunities for Fundamental Space Biology Investigations in Microbial, Plant and Cell Biology". The full text of the solicitation is available on the NASA Research Opportunities homepage at http://nspires.nasaprs.com under menu listing "Open Solicitations".

Potential applicants are urged to access this site well in advance of the proposal due date to familiarize themselves with its structure and to register in the system. Notices of Intent (not required) are due on July 7, 2008, and proposals are due on September 8, 2008. Proposals are required to be submitted electronically and must be submitted by an authorized official of the proposing organization.

This Exploration Systems Mission Directorate (ESMD), Advanced Capabilities Division, National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) Research Announcement (NRA) solicits ground based research in the fundamental space biology areas of microbial, plant and cell biology. Fundamental space biology addresses basic questions of how life responds to gravity and space environments. The force of gravity plays a major role in shaping life into its myriad forms. Fundamental space biology uses the ground based space environment analogs supplemented with space based investigations to probe the fundamental nature of life in order to enhance our understanding of how life responds to physical phenomena and physical forces on Earth and serves as the basic biological foundation in support of exploration. The microbial and cell biology research emphases of the solicitation are the molecular and the morphological responses of microbes and animal cells (cell culture to small non-rodent animals) to altered and reduced gravity. The plant biology research emphases of this solicitation are plant graviperception and space environmental conditions responses. The NRA calls for ground based research that would eventually lead to experiments on flight platforms.

Participation is open to all categories of organizations, including educational institutions, industry, nonprofit organizations, NASA centers, and other Government agencies. Electronic proposals may be submitted via the NASA Proposal data system NSPIRES or via Grants.gov. Every organization that intends to submit a proposal in response to this NRA must be registered with NSPIRES, and such registration must identify the authorized organizational representative(s) who will submit the electronic proposal. Instructions on how to register in NSPIRES is described in the NRA. Each electronic proposal system places requirements on the registration of principal investigators and other participants (e.g. co-investigators). Questions in regards to responding to this NRA may be addressed to the contacts referenced in the full solicitation document.

This email is being sent on behalf of and is intended as an information announcement to researchers interested in NASA's Fundamental Space Biology research. Replies to this email will go unanswered, please reference the above solicitation for contact information.

June 4, 2008

Astrobiology Science News 4 June 2008

June 3, 2008

Astrobiology Science News 3 June 2008


June 2, 2008

Astrobiology Science News 2 June 2008

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