NASA to Amp Up Search for Extraterrestrial Life

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Alien life is making news lately, and now NASA looks to lead the charge.
The agency announced eight possible missions Wednesday that would closely examine tiny microorganisms and minerals, according to CNN.
“Astrobiology and the search for life is central to many of the most important missions that we are studying,” Steve Squyres, the Cornell astronomer leading the Mars Exploration Rover Mission, said on a conference call with reporters.
The missions include robotic soil sample-and-return missions to Mars, and looking for life in water on distant moons, the report said. Specifically, they include sending landers to Mercury, analyzing methane on Mars, probing Europa’s oceans, searching for organic materials on Titan, and more closely examining comets.
None of the missions have been approved, according to the report. Separately, Squyres announced Wednesday that in an effort to maximize newly limited budgets, NASA is considering a plan to stretch out missions to return samples from Mars into three parts, Reuters reports. (Image credit: NASA/Terrestrial Planet Finder concept)
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