Paper
3 October 2007 Mitigation of environmental extremes as a possible indicator of extended habitat sustainability for lakes on early Mars
Nathalie A. Cabrol, Edmond A. Grin, Andrew N. Hock
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
The impact of individual extremes on life, such as UV radiation (UVR), temperatures, and salinity is well documented. However, their combined effect in nature is not well-understood while it is a fundamental issue controlling the evolution of habitat sustainability within individual bodies of water. Environmental variables combine in the Bolivian Altiplano to produce some of the highest, least explored and most poorly understood lakes on Earth. Their physical environment of thin atmosphere, high ultraviolet radiation, high daily temperature amplitude, ice, sulfur-rich volcanism, and hydrothermal springs, combined with the changing climate in the Andes and the rapid loss of aqueous habitat provide parallels to ancient Martian lakes at the Noachian/Hesperian transition 3.7-3.5 Ga ago. Documenting this analogy is one of the focuses of the High-Lakes Project (HLP). The geophysical data we collected on three of them located up to 5,916 m elevation suggests that a combination of extreme factors does not necessarily translate into a harsher environment for life. Large and diverse ecosystems adapt to UVR reaching 200%-216% that of sea level in bodies of water sometimes no deeper than 50 cm, massive seasonal freeze-over, and unpredictable daily evolution of UVR and temperature. The HLP project has undertaken the first complete geophysical and biological characterization of these lakes and documents how habitability is sustained and prolonged in declining lakes despite a highly dynamical environment. The same process may have helped life transition through climate crises over time on both Earth and Mars.
© (2007) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Nathalie A. Cabrol, Edmond A. Grin, and Andrew N. Hock "Mitigation of environmental extremes as a possible indicator of extended habitat sustainability for lakes on early Mars", Proc. SPIE 6694, Instruments, Methods, and Missions for Astrobiology X, 669410 (3 October 2007); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.731506
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Cited by 6 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Mars

Climatology

Ultraviolet radiation

Environmental sensing

Temperature metrology

Climate change

Ecosystems

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