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Deciphering Biosignatures in Planetary Contexts

Microbial life permeates Earth's critical zone and has likely inhabited nearly all our planet's surface and near subsurface since before the beginning of the sedimentary rock record. Given the vast time that Earth has been teeming with life, do astrobiologists truly understand what geologi...

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Autores principales: Chan, Marjorie A., Hinman, Nancy W., Potter-McIntyre, Sally L., Schubert, Keith E., Gillams, Richard J., Awramik, Stanley M., Boston, Penelope J., Bower, Dina M., Des Marais, David J., Farmer, Jack D., Jia, Tony Z., King, Penelope L., Hazen, Robert M., Léveillé, Richard J., Papineau, Dominic, Rempfert, Kaitlin R., Sánchez-Román, Mónica, Spear, John R., Southam, Gordon, Stern, Jennifer C., Cleaves, Henderson James
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Mary Ann Liebert, Inc., publishers 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6708275/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31335163
http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/ast.2018.1903
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author Chan, Marjorie A.
Hinman, Nancy W.
Potter-McIntyre, Sally L.
Schubert, Keith E.
Gillams, Richard J.
Awramik, Stanley M.
Boston, Penelope J.
Bower, Dina M.
Des Marais, David J.
Farmer, Jack D.
Jia, Tony Z.
King, Penelope L.
Hazen, Robert M.
Léveillé, Richard J.
Papineau, Dominic
Rempfert, Kaitlin R.
Sánchez-Román, Mónica
Spear, John R.
Southam, Gordon
Stern, Jennifer C.
Cleaves, Henderson James
author_facet Chan, Marjorie A.
Hinman, Nancy W.
Potter-McIntyre, Sally L.
Schubert, Keith E.
Gillams, Richard J.
Awramik, Stanley M.
Boston, Penelope J.
Bower, Dina M.
Des Marais, David J.
Farmer, Jack D.
Jia, Tony Z.
King, Penelope L.
Hazen, Robert M.
Léveillé, Richard J.
Papineau, Dominic
Rempfert, Kaitlin R.
Sánchez-Román, Mónica
Spear, John R.
Southam, Gordon
Stern, Jennifer C.
Cleaves, Henderson James
author_sort Chan, Marjorie A.
collection PubMed
description Microbial life permeates Earth's critical zone and has likely inhabited nearly all our planet's surface and near subsurface since before the beginning of the sedimentary rock record. Given the vast time that Earth has been teeming with life, do astrobiologists truly understand what geological features untouched by biological processes would look like? In the search for extraterrestrial life in the Universe, it is critical to determine what constitutes a biosignature across multiple scales, and how this compares with “abiosignatures” formed by nonliving processes. Developing standards for abiotic and biotic characteristics would provide quantitative metrics for comparison across different data types and observational time frames. The evidence for life detection falls into three categories of biosignatures: (1) substances, such as elemental abundances, isotopes, molecules, allotropes, enantiomers, minerals, and their associated properties; (2) objects that are physical features such as mats, fossils including trace-fossils and microbialites (stromatolites), and concretions; and (3) patterns, such as physical three-dimensional or conceptual n-dimensional relationships of physical or chemical phenomena, including patterns of intermolecular abundances of organic homologues, and patterns of stable isotopic abundances between and within compounds. Five key challenges that warrant future exploration by the astrobiology community include the following: (1) examining phenomena at the “right” spatial scales because biosignatures may elude us if not examined with the appropriate instrumentation or modeling approach at that specific scale; (2) identifying the precise context across multiple spatial and temporal scales to understand how tangible biosignatures may or may not be preserved; (3) increasing capability to mine big data sets to reveal relationships, for example, how Earth's mineral diversity may have evolved in conjunction with life; (4) leveraging cyberinfrastructure for data management of biosignature types, characteristics, and classifications; and (5) using three-dimensional to n-D representations of biotic and abiotic models overlain on multiple overlapping spatial and temporal relationships to provide new insights.
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spelling pubmed-67082752019-08-26 Deciphering Biosignatures in Planetary Contexts Chan, Marjorie A. Hinman, Nancy W. Potter-McIntyre, Sally L. Schubert, Keith E. Gillams, Richard J. Awramik, Stanley M. Boston, Penelope J. Bower, Dina M. Des Marais, David J. Farmer, Jack D. Jia, Tony Z. King, Penelope L. Hazen, Robert M. Léveillé, Richard J. Papineau, Dominic Rempfert, Kaitlin R. Sánchez-Román, Mónica Spear, John R. Southam, Gordon Stern, Jennifer C. Cleaves, Henderson James Astrobiology Review Article Microbial life permeates Earth's critical zone and has likely inhabited nearly all our planet's surface and near subsurface since before the beginning of the sedimentary rock record. Given the vast time that Earth has been teeming with life, do astrobiologists truly understand what geological features untouched by biological processes would look like? In the search for extraterrestrial life in the Universe, it is critical to determine what constitutes a biosignature across multiple scales, and how this compares with “abiosignatures” formed by nonliving processes. Developing standards for abiotic and biotic characteristics would provide quantitative metrics for comparison across different data types and observational time frames. The evidence for life detection falls into three categories of biosignatures: (1) substances, such as elemental abundances, isotopes, molecules, allotropes, enantiomers, minerals, and their associated properties; (2) objects that are physical features such as mats, fossils including trace-fossils and microbialites (stromatolites), and concretions; and (3) patterns, such as physical three-dimensional or conceptual n-dimensional relationships of physical or chemical phenomena, including patterns of intermolecular abundances of organic homologues, and patterns of stable isotopic abundances between and within compounds. Five key challenges that warrant future exploration by the astrobiology community include the following: (1) examining phenomena at the “right” spatial scales because biosignatures may elude us if not examined with the appropriate instrumentation or modeling approach at that specific scale; (2) identifying the precise context across multiple spatial and temporal scales to understand how tangible biosignatures may or may not be preserved; (3) increasing capability to mine big data sets to reveal relationships, for example, how Earth's mineral diversity may have evolved in conjunction with life; (4) leveraging cyberinfrastructure for data management of biosignature types, characteristics, and classifications; and (5) using three-dimensional to n-D representations of biotic and abiotic models overlain on multiple overlapping spatial and temporal relationships to provide new insights. Mary Ann Liebert, Inc., publishers 2019-09-01 2019-08-22 /pmc/articles/PMC6708275/ /pubmed/31335163 http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/ast.2018.1903 Text en © Marjorie A. Chan et al., 2019; Published by Mary Ann Liebert, Inc. This Open Access article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly credited.
spellingShingle Review Article
Chan, Marjorie A.
Hinman, Nancy W.
Potter-McIntyre, Sally L.
Schubert, Keith E.
Gillams, Richard J.
Awramik, Stanley M.
Boston, Penelope J.
Bower, Dina M.
Des Marais, David J.
Farmer, Jack D.
Jia, Tony Z.
King, Penelope L.
Hazen, Robert M.
Léveillé, Richard J.
Papineau, Dominic
Rempfert, Kaitlin R.
Sánchez-Román, Mónica
Spear, John R.
Southam, Gordon
Stern, Jennifer C.
Cleaves, Henderson James
Deciphering Biosignatures in Planetary Contexts
title Deciphering Biosignatures in Planetary Contexts
title_full Deciphering Biosignatures in Planetary Contexts
title_fullStr Deciphering Biosignatures in Planetary Contexts
title_full_unstemmed Deciphering Biosignatures in Planetary Contexts
title_short Deciphering Biosignatures in Planetary Contexts
title_sort deciphering biosignatures in planetary contexts
topic Review Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6708275/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31335163
http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/ast.2018.1903
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