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What Came First: Viruses or Cells?
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What Came First: Viruses or Cells?
Terrestrial Origins A new computational method for tracing the evolution of proteins may help scientists determine how life on Earth began…and solve the question of whether or not viruses developed before living cells.
Full Story...     Friday, September 05, 2008


A Warm Breath of Carbon Dioxide
Terrestrial Climate History When the sun was young, it didn't produce enough heat to unfreeze ice on our planet. So why was the early Earth covered in liquid water and not ice?
Full Story...     Thursday, September 04, 2008


Lukewarm Supervolcano
Terrestrial Climate History Yellowstone is known for its hot springs and geysers, and the unique forms of life that inhabit them. Scientists are now learning more about the mysterious 'supervolcano' that powers these environments, and whether or not the giant could erupt again.
Full Story...     Wednesday, September 03, 2008


Earth's Leaky Atmosphere
Terrestrial Climate History Using satellite observations, scientists have discovered why the Earth is constantly leaking oxygen into space. The finding provides insight into the mechanisms behind oxygen loss on our planet.
Full Story...     Tuesday, September 02, 2008


Mars Research in Polar Bear Country
Mars Life New from the Nordic issue of Astrobiology Magazine, European Edition: An interview with Hans Amundsen, the expedition leader of AMASE (Arctic Mars Analog Svalbard Expedition). AMASE scientists travel to a group of islands in the High Arctic in order to conduct Mars-related field research.
Full Story...     Monday, September 01, 2008


Climbing Out of a Crater
Mars Life A year after descending into Victoria crater, NASA's Mars Exploration rover Opportunity is heading back out. Opportunity will now continue making important scientific observations on the martian plains.
Full Story...     Sunday, August 31, 2008


Primitive Pancake
Terrestrial Origins In sequencing the genome of a primitive animal, scientists are gaining new insights into the tree of life. Even though it’s a simple animal, Trichoplax adhaerens has a complex set of genes and may signify a branching point in animal evolution.
Full Story...     Saturday, August 30, 2008


Mapping Planets, Moons and Asteroids
Missions Researchers are using images of solar system bodies in different lighting conditions to produce high-resolution topographical maps of locations like asteroids. The maps could help in exploration and the search for life in the solar system.
Full Story...     Friday, August 29, 2008


Drilling Down to Alien Oceans
Missions A new method of exploring thick icy sheets and what lies below them has been devised. Combining a drill and a melting tip, this probe is particularly useful for exploring icy locations such as the polar caps of Mars and Jupiter’s moon Europa.
Full Story...     Thursday, August 28, 2008


Tracing Tiger Stripes
Life and Giant Planets NASA's Cassini spacecraft has pinpointed where Enceladus' icy jets erupt from at the moon's surface. The new images may help reveal what type of environment exists on the moon, and whether or not Enceladus could be a habitat for life.
Full Story...     Wednesday, August 27, 2008


 
Astrobiology Magazine European Edition
Sky and Telescope Podcasts

Your Audio Sky Tour: June 2008
This month you have a chance to see three or four bright planets in the sky.
5MB MP3 download
Running time: 5m15s

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