News and Press

FfAME News and Press

Decades Old Mistake Corrected in Science eLetter

A team of Foundation scientists joined with European astrobiologist Dirk Schulze-Makuch to publish last week in Science magazine an eLetter that corrected, at last, a 49 year old mistake published in Science by Klaus Biemann and his coworkers. The eLetter is appended to the bottom of the Biemann et al. abstract. This mistake published in Science caused multiple generations of astrobiologists to believe incorrectly that the Martian soil contained no organic molecules. This evolved into the view that the Martian soil is "self-sterilizing" because it contained a powerful "mystery" oxidant, and therefore could not possibly hold extant Martian life. Read more.

Decades Old Mistake Corrected in Science eLetter

A team of Foundation scientists joined with European astrobiologist Dirk Schulze-Makuch to publish last week in Science magazine an eLetter that corrected, at last, a 49 year old mistake published in Science by Klaus Biemann and his coworkers. The eLetter is appended to the bottom of the Biemann et al. abstract. This mistake published in Science caused multiple generations of astrobiologists to believe incorrectly that the Martian soil contained no organic molecules. This evolved into the view that the Martian soil is "self-sterilizing" because it contained a powerful "mystery" oxidant, and therefore could not possibly hold extant Martian life. Read more.

Event Horizons Interview with Dr. Steven Benner

Dr. Steven Benner was interviewed for Event Horizon, with topics covering the recent reevaluation of the last year discovery of "leopard spots" and "poppy seeds" (vivianite) in rock on Mars, Viking missions, and life on Mars in general.

Space.com reports on search for life on Mars

A Space.com article exploring the quest for life on Mars and the challenges of sample-return mission spotlights the groundbreaking efforts led by Foundation researchers Steven Benner and Jan Špaček at FfAME and the Agnostic Life Finding Association (ALFA).