Building blocks of life found in famous Mars meteorite0
- From Around the Web, Space
- May 5, 2020
And the organics contain nitrogen, another ingredient necessary for life as we know it.

And the organics contain nitrogen, another ingredient necessary for life as we know it.

Since the start of the novel coronavirus pandemic, Heidi Fraser has been cleaning her grandparents’ house, which she says is as “old as my hometown of Sherbrooke.”

A drought, equal to the worst to have hit the western US in recorded history, is already under way, say scientists.

The Eta Aquarid meteor shower peaks overnight tonight (May 4), with the best views arriving before dawn on Tuesday (May 5).

Four-billion-year-old carbonates in a Martian meteorite called Allan Hills (ALH) 84001 contain nitrogen-bearing organic molecules, according to a new study published in the journal Nature Communications.

Mars’ ancient magnetic field emerged earlier and persisted for longer than scientists previously thought, according to a new study.

Although Defense Minister Taro Kono doesn’t believe in UFOs, he wants the Self-Defense Forces to have a plan in place for any encounter–just in case.

The sun appears to be far less active than similar stars in terms of brightness variations caused by sunspots and other phenomena – a “boring” personality, according to scientists, that may not be a bad thing for us Earthlings.

The former Senate Majority Leader says the “American people deserve to be informed” about UFOs.

After NASA’s Spitzer Space Telescope captured an intense flare, right on cue in 2019, astronomers can finally claim to have solved this mystery



