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Saturday, July 7, 2007 | Science : Evolution and Biology | print version Print | Comments

Document Scientists Urge a Search for Life Not as We Know It

by Carl Zimmer

Reposted from the NYTimes:
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/07/07/science/space/07alien.html?ref=science

A panel of scientists convened by the country's leading scientific advisory group says the hunt for extraterrestrial life should be greatly expanded to include what they call "weird life": organisms that lack DNA or other molecules found in life as we know it.

"The committee's investigation makes clear that life is possible in forms different from those on Earth," the scientists conclude in their report, "The Limits of Organic Life in Planetary Systems," published yesterday by the National Research Council.

Other experts hailed the report as an important rethinking of the search for life.

"It's going to help us a lot to make sure we go exploring with our eyes wide open," said Michael A. Meyer, lead scientist for NASA's Mars exploration program.

Starfish, sequoias, salamanders and the rest of Earth's residents may seem very diverse, but they are surprisingly similar on the molecular scale. All species that scientists have studied need liquid water to survive, for example. Further, they all rely on DNA to carry genetic information, and they all use that information to build proteins from the same set of building blocks, known as amino acids.

NASA has long looked to life on Earth to guide its search for life in other worlds. Planets and moons that have hints of liquid water have been ranked high on the list of potential sites for life-detection missions.

But there is good reason to suspect that other kinds of chemistry could support life as well, the authors of the new report argue. Weird life could differ from life as we know it in small or big ways.

For example, while DNA uses phosphorus in its backbone, it might be possible to build a backbone out of arsenic instead. And life might exist in liquids other than water, perhaps ammonia or methane.

The report, which is posted on the Web site of the National Academies, www.nationalacademies.org, even explores the possibility of life based on silicon, not carbon, though Dr. Meyer, who had no role in the work, thinks that astrobiologists should limit their search to carbon-based life forms.

"When we look in the universe," he said, "the only compounds we see with more than six atoms are all carbon chemistry. So there's a hint that looking for carbon chemistry may be a better bet. There we have some idea of what to look for."

The report calls for NASA and the National Science Foundation both to support research into weird life. Chemists need to investigate "the chemical possibilities for what forms life might take," said one member of the committee, Steven A. Benner, a distinguished fellow at the Foundation for Applied Molecular Evolution, in Gainesville, Fla.

Scientists should also search Earth for weird life, the authors maintain. "There's much about Earth life we don't understand," said the panel's chairman, John A. Baross of the University of Washington.

Dr. Benner said there was "good evidence that the life we know on Earth was preceded by a weird form of life." Early Earth life may have been based on RNA, a single-stranded form of DNA. Though DNA-based life may have outcompeted earlier forms on the surface of the planet, RNA life may still exist in refuges. One potential hiding place is deep below the ocean floor.

"It's an incredibly primordial world down there," Dr. Baross said. "If you're going to look for remnants of an RNA world, those are the environments you want to go to."

To find weird life, however, scientists will have to build new kinds of detectors. "There's no question that the surveys of life on the planet we've done so far would have missed it," Dr. Benner said.

The scientists also said the possibility of weird life should prompt NASA to reorder its future missions. They singled out Saturn's moon Titan as particularly promising. The Huygens probe that visited Titan in 2005 found evidence of liquid methane raining down on its surface, as well as a mix of water and ammonia seeping up from its interior. Both could conceivably support life, although not necessarily life as we know it.

"Nothing," the report concluded, "would be more tragic in the American exploration of space than to encounter alien life and fail to recognize it."

Comments 1 - 15 of 15 |

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1. Comment #54460 by Angieruns on July 7, 2007 at 9:47 am

Search the Earth for "weird life"? But weird life is not mentioned in the book of Genesis; therefore it must not exist...

But wait...the bible also does not mention marsupials or dinasaurs...wonder why that is...

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2. Comment #54464 by Kakashi_monkey on July 7, 2007 at 10:34 am

 avatarThe Bible definitely doesn't mention dinosaurs! This "weird life" concept is a good step in looking for alien life. What makes extraterrestrail life diffrent from us isn't just looks, but chemestry makeup too. Who knows what aliens out there will be based on or swimming in?

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3. Comment #54465 by TemporaryAura on July 7, 2007 at 10:36 am

 avatarWith most Americans feeling tepid at best about NASA and space exploration these days, they won't view it as "tragic". They want their tax $$ to go to the here and now problems.

It will take the continued efforts of committed NASA people, private (albiet rich) citizens such as Sir Richard Branson, and other countries to further scientific research (and hopefully spark more interest); such as the ISS and Large Hadron Collider in Switzerland.

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4. Comment #54467 by Funny Grievous on July 7, 2007 at 10:49 am

 avatarWow, I've only rarely heard about the possibility that E.T. life might be able to live without Water, but I've never heard the idea that it might not have DNA!

Right on, TemporaryAura! Just imagine how much NASA could have discovered if they got better funding!... ^/_\^

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5. Comment #54483 by Morro on July 7, 2007 at 12:13 pm

 avatarWell, any theoretical hereditary unit would probably mirror DNA in a few key ways - complementary base pairing, most obviously. The physical structure of it would almost certainly be different, but it would be functionally similar due to the necessity of duplicating the hereditary information.

Not to be a party pooper, but aren't there more important issues? I mean, finding ET life would be huge, but given the chances of it actually happening... there are better uses of the time and money, right now.

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6. Comment #54531 by The Schuermannator on July 7, 2007 at 4:40 pm

 avatarMorro-

You are assuming the chances of the space industry's chances of finding life elsewhere is very small. I invite you to watch a few episodes of NOVA and The Universe, and other various shows featuring astrobiology segments. You may be surprised!

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7. Comment #54532 by Jolly Wally on July 7, 2007 at 4:46 pm

I've always wondered why life HAD to come about specifically the way it did for us. It seems to ignore other possibilities, thus lowering the perceived probabilities.

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8. Comment #54573 by troyreynolds86 on July 7, 2007 at 9:40 pm

Morro,
Perhaps your understanding of chemistry far outreaches mine (admittedly limited to property studies for materials and basic chemistry beyond that) but why would it need base pairs in order to maintain heredity? I would agree that other life would require a catalyst system for chemical replication (this strikes me as essential) but perhaps the hereditary information could be contained upon millions of individual molecules, or perhaps a strand of molecules that encoded the replication sequence inside of the hereditary material. There conceivably exist several ways that this could be done. Just wondering if you could be more specific.

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9. Comment #54580 by Dr Benway on July 7, 2007 at 10:24 pm

 avatarSustainable self-replication seems theoretically possible in some manner not involving nucleic acids and proteins. It's an interesting thought experiment.

Think of creating a plaster cast of an item, then using that cast to make more items. Some collection of the items then combine to create another cast...

Now what chemical substrates might serve? Hmm.

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10. Comment #54668 by Morro on July 8, 2007 at 12:22 pm

 avatar
why would it need base pairs in order to maintain heredity?

You wouldn't. But, and maybe I just lack imagination, but I think you would need some sort of complementary pairing system, wherein the "code" is matched with a second string. This second string is a different but equal expression: If A always pairs with T (and it does,) then A and T become functionally identical when it comes to replicating DNA.

Again, maybe I lack imagination. But some sort of redundancy seems to be necessary, and I can't think of another way that could come about via the non-evolutionary chemistry that would give rise to the first hereditary unit.

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11. Comment #54730 by ghostbuster on July 8, 2007 at 7:10 pm

Kinda reminds me a Gary Larson's cartoon where an alien shows up looking exactly like a tin can on a post and a hunter shoots off the tin can--the caption reading "A tragic end to man's first encounter with aliens"--something like that anyway. Maybe some truth there.

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12. Comment #54887 by logical on July 9, 2007 at 8:32 am

 avatarWhat is "weird", please?
Energy beings living in solar coronas?
Intelligent stars?
Life forms based on carbon or silicon are quite familiar to any SF reader.
All right, life as near as Titan would cause some people trouble to get used to, most of us think we have to develop superlight speed drive first.
But I personally would prefer to be sure there is no life on Mars or Venus because to terraform them (bringing water or, on Venus, hydrogen) would kill anything which developed there.

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13. Comment #55327 by Johnny O on July 10, 2007 at 4:00 pm

 avatar
But wait...the bible also does not mention marsupials or dinasaurs...wonder why that is...


Genesis Chapter 1: Verse 20
And God said, Let the waters bring forth abundantly the moving creature that hath life, and fowl that may fly above the earth in the open firmament of heaven.

Genesis Chapter 1: Verse 21
And God created great whales, and every living creature that moveth, which the waters brought forth abundantly, after their kind, and every winged fowl after his kind: and God saw that it was good.

Genesis Chapter 1: Verse 24
And God said, Let the earth bring forth the living creature after his kind, cattle, and creeping thing, and beast of the earth after his kind: and it was so.

Genesis Chapter 1: Verse 25
And God made the beast of the earth after his kind, and cattle after their kind, and every thing that creepeth upon the earth after his kind: and God saw that it was good.

See... He made everything. I'm pretty sure he invented Velcro, Scatter Cushions and Aromatherapy Candles... I just haven't found those bits yet.

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14. Comment #56912 by kardde1492 on July 17, 2007 at 8:13 pm

morro,

when it comes to E.T. life i think we are going to end up very suprised. it may be carbon, but if the planet it started on had oh say collided with a comet made almost completley of silicon and silicon was spread over the planet, creating a disporpotion of it to other elements, wouldnt it be more likely for any life that developed there to be silicon based? i think life is going to use whatever will be most useful.

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15. Comment #59378 by kdcarlson on July 28, 2007 at 10:17 pm

But Johnny O, I think if you keep looking you will find references to Disco "speaking in many tounges' ( I never did figure out which part of my booty I was supposed to shake) and Shag Carpet, something about piled deep or was that deep pile ?) and what about "the Madona" ?? and devine figures cloaked in white ( John Travolta ????)

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