NASA's Curiosity Rover Discovers Never-Before-Seen Organic Molecules on Mars
Rock sample from Mount Sharp contains nitrogen heterocycle and benzothiophene, raising questions about ancient Martian chemistry and potential past life
Quick Look
- NASA's Curiosity rover has detected previously unseen organic molecules in a rock sample drilled on Mars in 2020, including a nitrogen heterocycle that serves as a chemical precursor to RNA and DNA.
- The discovery, confirmed after years of lab work, provides further evidence that ancient Mars had the right chemistry to support life, though scientists cannot determine whether the molecules originated from biologic or geologic processes.
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Why It Matters
The search for organic molecules on Mars has been a primary goal of NASA's Curiosity mission. The rover has been exploring Mount Sharp since 2014, analyzing rock samples from ancient lake beds that existed billions of years ago when Mars may have had conditions suitable for microbial life.
NASA's Curiosity rover has found organic molecules on Mars that have never been detected before - hinting at the possibility there was once life on the Red Planet. After years of lab work, a rock that the rover drilled and analysed in 2020 has been confirmed to include organic molecules. But scientists have no way of knowing if these molecules were created by biologic or geologic processes - either path is possible, the space agency says. However, their discovery provided further confirmation that ancient Mars had the right chemistry to support life. The news comes soon after the success of the Artemis II mission, in which three astronauts travelled further from Earth than any human had ever been. "This collection of organic molecules once again increases the prospect that Mars offered a home for life in the ancient past," mission project scientist Ashwin Vasavada said. "This is Curiosity and our team at their best. It took dozens of scientists and engineers to locate this site, drill the sample, and make these discoveries with our awesome robot." The rock sample was nicknamed Mary Anning 3 after an English paleontologist and was found on part of the planet's Mount Sharp - a region that was covered by lakes and streams billions of years ago. Among the newly identified molecules is a nitrogen heterocycle. Its molecular structure - a ring of carbon atoms including nitrogen - is considered a predecessor to RNA and DNA. "That detection is pretty profound because these structures can be chemical precursors to more complex nitrogen-bearing molecules," said the paper's lead author, Amy Williams of the University of Florida in Gainesville. "Nitrogen heterocycles have never been found before on the Martian surface or confirmed in Martian meteorites." Also discovered was benzothiophene, which has previously been found in meteorites. These meteorites, along with the organic molecules within them, are believed by some scientists to have seeded prebiotic chemistry across the early solar system.
Open Questions
- Were these organic molecules created by biological processes or geological chemistry?
- What other organic compounds might exist on Mars that haven't been detected yet?
- Could these findings inform the search for past or present life on Mars?






