This week’s science news: Martian life, peculiar water, and an intriguing human relative

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The potential for life on Mars, a peculiar human relative, and more in this week’s science roundup.(Image credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/MSSS/Rising Star Program)Jump to category:

  • Peculiar human cousin becomes stranger
  • Intriguing scientific questions
  • Water may exist as 2 states
  • Also in science news this week
  • Science Spotlight
  • Weekend Reading
  • Science in Pictures
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This week, we have taken a significant stride toward determining if life indeed existed on Mars, as NASA’s Perseverance rover has detected the most abundant concentration of organic molecules on the Red Planet to date.

The findings originate from mudstone samples within Jezero crater, an area believed to have once contained a deep lake. Last year, scientists reported a rock specimen exhibiting patterns analogous to those left by microorganisms on Earth, presenting it as one of the most compelling indications of past Martian life.

Peculiar human cousin becomes stranger’A strange finding from an already peculiar hominin’: Archeologists discover all Homo naledi skeletons found in South African cave are female

The largest (left) and the smallest (right) skulls of Homo naledi unearthed in South Africa’s Rising Star cave system. All specimens of H. naledi have been identified as female.

(Image credit: Rising Star Program)

Intriguing scientific questionsHow did the Romans construct such perfectly straight roads?

The exceptionally straight Stane Street in southern England was engineered by the Romans.

(Image credit: Tim Stocker Photography via Getty Images)

Water may exist as 2 statesWater might secretly be composed of 2 distinct liquids, according to scientists

A depiction of a water molecule. Recent research lends support to a controversial theory suggesting that water transitions between two chemical states.

(Image credit: Yaroslav Kushta via Getty Images)

Also in science news this week

Science Spotlight’If any nation is to achieve it, it will be China’: Why is China rerouting some of the world’s most powerful rivers for thousands of miles?

Residents of China’s major northern cities have access to 74 times less freshwater compared to the average American; consequently, the Chinese government has implemented the world’s largest water diversion initiative.

(Image credit: Xinmei Liu for Live Science)

Weekend Reading

Science in PicturesNASA satellite captures a vast wave of warm water, hundreds of miles long, signaling a devastatingly strong El Niño

A surge of warm water and elevated sea levels (indicated in red) spans the Pacific Ocean, observed a few days prior to the official declaration of El Niño.

(Image credit: Data for the map were collected by the Sentinel-6 Michael Freilich satellite and processed by scientists at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL). NASA Earth Observatory/Lauren Dauphin)

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