Because of the ubiquity of subsurface microbial life on Earth, examination of the subsurface of Mars could provide an answer to the question of whether microorganisms exist or ever existed on that planet. Impact craters provide a natural mechanism for accessing the deep substrate of Mars and exploring its exobiological potential. Based on equations that relate impact crater diameters to excavation depth we estimate the observed crater diameters that are required to prospect to given depths in the martian subsurface and we relate these depths to observed microbiological phenomena in the terrestrial subsurface. Simple craters can be used to examine material to a depth of ∼270 m. Complex craters can be used to reach greater depths, with crater...
Impact-shocked gneiss shocked to greater than 10 GPa in the Haughton impact structure in the Canadia...
In the last year, NASA's Mars science advisory committee (MEPAG: Mars Exploration Payload Advisory G...
The 2005 ICDP-USGS deep drilling of the Chesapeake Bay Impact Structure (CBIS) returned the first co...
Because of the ubiquity of subsurface microbial life on Earth, examination of the subsurface of Mars...
On Earth, the deep subsurface biosphere of both the oceanic and the continental crust is well known ...
During the Noachian period impact cratering was the dominant geological process on Early Mars and th...
On Earth, the deep biosphere remains a largely unexplored, but clearly important carbon reservoir. R...
Impact craters are important targets for Mars exploration, especially craters of ancient (Noachian) ...
Asteroid and comet impacts are known to have caused profound disruption to multicellular life, yet t...
Fluvial features and evidence for aqueous alteration indicate that Mars was wet, at least partially ...
We developed scenarios for shallow and deep subsurface cryptic niches for microbial life on Mars. Su...
Impact craters on Mars act as traps for eolian sediment and in the past may have provided suitable m...
The search for life (or the examination of the reasons for its absence) is one of the most compellin...
Microbes in Haughton Crater Sulfates: Impact craters are of high interest in planetary exploration b...
The search for evidence of microbial life in the deep subsurface of Earth has implications for the M...
Impact-shocked gneiss shocked to greater than 10 GPa in the Haughton impact structure in the Canadia...
In the last year, NASA's Mars science advisory committee (MEPAG: Mars Exploration Payload Advisory G...
The 2005 ICDP-USGS deep drilling of the Chesapeake Bay Impact Structure (CBIS) returned the first co...
Because of the ubiquity of subsurface microbial life on Earth, examination of the subsurface of Mars...
On Earth, the deep subsurface biosphere of both the oceanic and the continental crust is well known ...
During the Noachian period impact cratering was the dominant geological process on Early Mars and th...
On Earth, the deep biosphere remains a largely unexplored, but clearly important carbon reservoir. R...
Impact craters are important targets for Mars exploration, especially craters of ancient (Noachian) ...
Asteroid and comet impacts are known to have caused profound disruption to multicellular life, yet t...
Fluvial features and evidence for aqueous alteration indicate that Mars was wet, at least partially ...
We developed scenarios for shallow and deep subsurface cryptic niches for microbial life on Mars. Su...
Impact craters on Mars act as traps for eolian sediment and in the past may have provided suitable m...
The search for life (or the examination of the reasons for its absence) is one of the most compellin...
Microbes in Haughton Crater Sulfates: Impact craters are of high interest in planetary exploration b...
The search for evidence of microbial life in the deep subsurface of Earth has implications for the M...
Impact-shocked gneiss shocked to greater than 10 GPa in the Haughton impact structure in the Canadia...
In the last year, NASA's Mars science advisory committee (MEPAG: Mars Exploration Payload Advisory G...
The 2005 ICDP-USGS deep drilling of the Chesapeake Bay Impact Structure (CBIS) returned the first co...