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Fossil or inorganic structure? Scientists dig into early life forms
Florida State University Professor of Chemistry Oliver Steinbock and Professor Juan Manuel Garcia-Ruiz of the Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Cientificas (Spanish National Research Council) in Granada, Spain published an article in Wednesday's edition of Science Advances that shows fossil-like objects grew in natural spring water abundant in the early stages of the planet. But they were inorganic materials that resulted from simple chemical reactions (...)
originally posted by: sputniksteve
Granted I don't understand fossils and inorganic chemicals but it seems this could open a can of worms we as humanity aren't really prepared to consider. That's not even mentioning the direction you are afraid it will go.
originally posted by: bender151
a reply to: jeep3r
I'd settle for a picture of a planet that isn't an artist's rendition...
originally posted by: jeep3r
Finding life outside of our terrestrial biosphere just got a lot more difficult. An international team of researchers discovered that inorganic chemicals can self-organize into complex structures that mimic primitive life on Earth.
originally posted by: bender151
a reply to: jeep3r
I'd settle for a picture of a planet that isn't an artist's rendition...
originally posted by: smurfy
a reply to: jeep3r
Well, I'm sure you know that Ex-NASA Astrobiologist Richard Hoover already maintains that a Crinoid fossil was obliterated by a rover on Mars after a short while. (Google gallery below) It's pretty clear that Hoover does know his stuff, and while considered controversial by some over other claims, even there the hubbub has cooled down somewhat.
www.google.co.uk...,ssl&ei=3xzLWOez G-nXgAabpbGADQ
It could be a crafty to settle malaise on the subject, but it's also pretty clear that regular, and regularish recurring non biological forms do happen, both on Earth and on Mars and anywhere else for that matter.
Thing is say, in the first picture it is given as a biomorph, what would a biologist have to say about that picture, what would an astrobiologist have to say about it, and what would they all say about it if they all knew its origin.
originally posted by: charlyv
a reply to: jeep3r
The chemistry will give it away however. It is almost as if chemical analysis will have to go hand in hand with every discovery like this, as it should. We have already eliminated photography as proof of anything, as that technology has been refined so well that we can fool ourselves with it.
"Inorganic microstructures can potentially be indistinguishable from ancient traces of life both in morphology and chemical composition," Garcia-Ruiz said.