These alien geysers spew life's building blocks | | Is the subsurface ocean on Saturn's moon Enceladus habitable? Could it be home to existing life forms? While we still don't know the answer to the second question, evidence continues to build that this small moon's ocean is habitable by earthly standards. This month, scientists announced another piece of the puzzle: the discovery of additional kinds of organic compounds that originate from Enceladus' ocean, and were found by the Cassini spacecraft to be gushing out through geysers at the moon's south pole. These compounds are the ingredients for amino acids, the building blocks of life on Earth. Read more. | | |
How deep is Earth's ocean? | | On average the ocean is 2.3 miles (3.7 km) deep, but many parts are much shallower or deeper. In the deepest zones, life forms have adapted to live in the dark, under crushing water pressure. Watch a cool video. | | |
What we're reading From the European Space Agency … Can Earth's oceans turn the tide on climate change? | | ESA wrote: "As we pump more greenhouse gases into the atmosphere, the world is warming at an alarming rate, with devastating consequences. While our vast oceans are helping to take the heat out of climate change, new research shows that they are absorbing a lot more atmospheric carbon dioxide than previously thought – but these positives may be outweighed by the downsides." Read more. | | |
No comments:
Post a Comment