This image from NASA shows a top-down view of the OSIRIS-REx Touch-and-Go-Sample-Acquisition-Mechanism (TAGSAM) head, with the lid removed to reveal the asteroid sample inside. (NASA via AP)



NASA’s recent asteroid sample findings are reshaping our understanding of how life on Earth may have originated. The precious dust and pebbles collected from asteroid Bennu are not only providing insight into the early building blocks of life but also revealing evidence of an ancient watery world. This discovery is fueling theories that asteroids may have played a crucial role in seeding life on Earth.

The samples were brought back by NASA’s Osiris-Rex spacecraft, which successfully returned 122 grams (4 ounces) of material from the near-Earth asteroid Bennu in 2023. This mission marked the largest cosmic sample haul from beyond the moon, surpassing previous asteroid missions from Japan. While the samples were small, they were enough to uncover critical details about the asteroid’s composition and its potential links to the origins of life.

The research teams, who published their findings in the journals Nature and Nature Astronomy, found sodium-rich minerals and traces of amino acids, ammonia, and even components of the genetic code. These ingredients suggest that Bennu, which dates back 4.5 billion years, may have been a water-rich environment, providing the conditions necessary for life to form. “That’s the kind of environment that could have been essential to the steps that lead from elements to life,” said Tim McCoy, one of the study’s authors from the Smithsonian Institution.

These minerals, including delicate salts, are similar to those found in Earth’s dry lakebeds, such as the Mojave Desert in California and the Sahara in Africa. The salts on Bennu were preserved in a way that would not be possible for meteorites that have fallen to Earth. Yasuhito Sekine from the Institute of Science Tokyo, who was not involved in the studies, noted that this discovery was only made possible by the careful collection and preservation of samples directly from the asteroid.

The combination of these life-building materials with sodium-rich brines (salty water) on Bennu creates a pathway that could have led to life. McCoy suggests that these processes might have occurred much earlier and were more widespread than scientists previously believed.

One of the biggest surprises in the research was the high amount of nitrogen, including ammonia, found in the samples. Daniel Glavin, a scientist with NASA, emphasized that while similar organic molecules had been found in meteorites before, the organic material from Bennu is “real extraterrestrial organic material formed in space,” meaning it was not contaminated by Earth’s environment.

Bennu, a rubble pile measuring about one-third of a mile across, was once part of a much larger asteroid that was shattered by collisions with other space rocks. The new findings suggest that Bennu’s parent body may have contained an extensive underground network of lakes or even oceans. As the water evaporated over time, it left behind the salty minerals found in the asteroid’s surface.

With 60 laboratories around the world analyzing Bennu’s samples, scientists are excited about the new data, though they stress that further studies are necessary to fully understand the asteroid’s role in the origins of life. This work is just the beginning, and scientists are already looking ahead to future asteroid and comet sample missions. China is preparing to launch an asteroid sample return mission this year, and scientists are calling for missions to explore water-rich bodies like the dwarf planet Ceres and the moons Europa and Enceladus.

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