Biofilms May Have Sparked Life on Earth—and Could Sustain It in Space

belaUniverse Today22 hours ago10 Views

This preflight image shows the Space Biofilms experiment setup, using a standard 24-well lab plate with fungal samples, where each well holds a small surface piece coated with fungal spores. (Credit: NASA)

It’s 2041 and an astronaut on Mars Station 1 orbiting the Red Planet is inspecting life support systems in the bowels of the habitat. They open a compartment and are aghast to discover a mysterious goop clinging to the walls in microgravity that definitely shouldn’t be there. In their shock, they immediately have flashbacks from every alien-based science fiction movie they’ve ever seen, and are convinced they not only just discovered the first signs of alien life, but they won’t live to tell about it. After telling the rest of the crew in a heated panic, they calmly explain it’s not an alien menace, but a substance called biofilm, which has been present on Earth for billions of years.

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