Organic synthesis on Mars by electrochemical reduction of CO2

Steele, A.; Benning, L. G.; Wirth, R.; Siljestrom, S.; Fries, M. D.; Hauri, E.; Conrad, P. G.; Rogers, K.; Eigenbrode, J.; Schreiber, A.; Needham, A.; Wang, J. H.; McCubbin, F. M.; Kilcoyne, D.; Rodriguez Blanco, Juan Diego
2018
SCIENCE ADVANCES
DOI
10.1126/sciadv.aat5118
The sources and nature of organic carbon on Mars have been a subject of intense research. Steele et al. (2012) showed that 10 martian meteorites contain macromolecular carbon phases contained within pyroxene-and olivine-hosted melt inclusions. Here, we show that martian meteorites Tissint, Nakhla, and NWA 1950 have an inventory of organic carbon species associated with fluid-mineral reactions that are remarkably consistent with those detected by the Mars Science Laboratory (MSL) mission. We advance the hypothesis that interactions among spinel-group minerals, sulfides, and a brine enable the electrochemical reduction of aqueous CO2 to organic molecules. Although documented here in martian samples, a similar process likely occurs wherever igneous rocks containing spinel-group minerals and/or sulfides encounter brines.