Should We Terraform Mars?

by Paul Scott Anderson on December 30, 2011

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Artist's conception of a terraformed Mars. Credit: Wikimedia Commons

As we continue to explore farther out into our solar system and beyond, the question of habitation or colonization inevitably comes up. Manned bases on the Moon or Mars for example, have long been a dream of many. There is a natural desire to explore as far as we can go, and also to extend humanity’s presence on a permanent or at least semi-permanent basis. In order to do this, however, it is necessary to adapt to different extreme environments. On the Moon for example, a colony must be self-sustaining and protect its inhabitants from the airless, harsh environment outside.

Mars, though, is different. While future bases could adapt to the Martian environment as well, there is also the possibility of modifying the surrounding environment instead of just co-existing with it. This is the process of terraforming – essentially trying to tinker with Mars’ atmosphere and environment to make it more Earth-like. Although still a long ways off technologically, terraforming the Red Planet is seen as a future possibility. Perhaps the bigger question is, should we?

One of the main issues is whether Mars has any indigenous life or not – how does this affect the question of colonization or terraforming?

If Mars does have any kind of biosphere, it should be preserved as much as possible. We still don’t know yet if any such biosphere exists, but the possibility, which has only increased based on recent discoveries, must be taken into account. Such a precious discovery, which could teach us immensely about how life arose on both worlds, should be completely off-limits. Small colonies might be fine, but living on Mars should not be at the expense of any native habitats, if they exist. The most likely place to find life on Mars is underground. If the surface is truly as sterile and barren as it seems to be, then colonies there shouldn’t be too much of a problem. It has also been suggested that Martian caves would make ideal human habitats, serving as natural protection from the harsh conditions on the surface. True, but if it turned out that something else was already taking up residence in them, then we should leave them alone. If Mars is home to  any indigenous life, then terraforming should be a non-issue.

What if Mars is lifeless? Even if no life otherwise exists there, that pristine and unique alien environment, so far barely scratched by humans, needs to be preserved as is as much as possible. We’ve already done too much damage here on our own planet. By studying Mars and other planets and moons in their current natural state, we can learn so much about their history and also learn more about our own world in that context. We should appreciate the differences in and variety of worlds instead of just transforming them to suit our own ambitions.

There is also the more current but related problem of contamination. There has been a long-standing protocol, via the 1967 Outer Space Treaty, to have all spacecraft going to the Moon or Mars sterilized as much as possible. If bacteria from Earth made it to the Martian surface and survived, it would complicate the search for life there; if a lander or rover was to later identify living organisms in the soil, it might be difficult to determine whether they were just contamination or true native life forms. From both a scientific and ethical perspective, it would seem prudent to try to protect Mars as much as we can from earthly intruders. This applies equally to whether Mars is already inhabited or not. Fortunately, for almost any kind of bacteria or other microrganisms from Earth, it would be very difficult if not impossible to survive on the Martian surface, nevermind flourish. The risk of planet-wide contamination is very negligible, but it is still better to take strict preventive measures than to play with chance.

See also this excellent paper by astrobiologist Chris McKay. Some different views from this article on whether Mars should be protected and preserved at all costs or altered to help life to flourish there, but is a good presentation of the current ideas being put on the table. From the summary:

“Planetary ecosynthesis on Mars is being seriously discussed within the field of planetary science. It appears that restoring a thick atmosphere on Mars and the recreation of an environment habitable to many forms of life is possible. It is important now to consider if it “should” be done. To do this takes us into new and interesting territory in environmental ethics but both utilitarian and intrinsic worth arguments support the notion of planetary ecosynthesis. Strict preservationism arguments do not. It is important to have the long-term view of life on Mars and the possibilities of planetary ecosynthesis. This affects how we explore Mars now. Mars may well be our first step out into the biological universe, it is a step we should take carefully.”

About

Paul Scott Anderson is a freelance space writer with a life-long passion for space exploration and astronomy and has been a long-time member of The Planetary Society. He currently writes for Universe Today and Examiner.com. His own blog The Meridiani Journal is a chronicle of planetary exploration.

  • Anonymous

    For some reason, EVERYONE feels qualified to expound their opinions on this subject. Some really bad logic, emotional response and cluttered thinking being showcased here. If we can find no life there, then why preserve a desert? Ok, it’s pretty (if you think lifeless gravel fields are pretty) and it’s pristine but then, where your house used to be was a wonderful forest full of life. Billions of lifeforms lived (past tense) where that shopping mall is going up down the street. (Guess how much life an asphalt parking lot supports). No, Mars will never support the kind of out of control numbers we have here on Earth. The most optimistic estimates don’t even suggest that poor people could even survive there. (Honey, I sewed a patch on to your radiation suit so you can walk to your job at the Martian Quicky Mart.) No, it would always be the home of science, some manufacturing and mining and photographers (of beautiful, pristine boulder fields with peach sunsets.) The planet will always look pretty much like it does now with the notable exception of the possibility of some small bodies of water and rivers in the gulleys. (I think that would be an improvement.) (And a souvenir shop at the base of “Elvis Face Mountain”)http://thecydoniainstitute.com/The-1976-Face-on-Mars.php
    Venus is not even remotely comparable to Mars in terraforming possibilities. One is a monumental job. The other is akin to sending mobile communities to live on sunspots. Note how many probes have been sent to the surface of Mars compared to Venus. We can’t even build a ROBOT to survive that place! And to one commenter in particular, worrying about the fate of the sun or Andromeda galaxy mingling with our own is well, stupid. If you knew you could get another billion years or so for the human race by moving to Mars, would you really say it’s not worth it??? Recall that as a species, we’ve only existed for some 200,000 years.

    • http://twitter.com/Fourthletter58 Fourthletter58

      Venus is a planet with a huge greenhouse effect and a massive amount of pressure in it’s atmosphere. A few well aimed nukes could leak a huge amount of atmospheric pressure into space and Venus could suddenly become a lot more attractive to visitors.
      With Mars, building an atmosphere and thinking up a way to stop it leaking into space is a much bigger hurdle in both knowledge and resources.

      • Richard Ryan Grove

        Even if we could thin Venus’s atmosphere the nature of Venus is to volatile. Mars is basically dead and inactive making long term projects safer, with Venus is very volcanically active and that does not make the surface safe enough for a long term outpost. Plus even if you manage to dissipate the atmosphere it will still be acidic.

      • Colby Hayward

        I’m not sure you quite realize just how massive a planetary atmosphere is. The entirety of Earth’s nuclear arsenal at its peak would literally do nothing to the Venusian atmosphere. To have any significant effect you’d have to be throwing large asteroids or small moons at it.

      • Anonymous

        Yes, by adding billions of pounds (kilotonnes) of dust and radioactivity to Venus, we should make it a lot less hostile.

    • Xybex R&D
    • Anonymous

      I`m not saying we should not put a station of some sort on Mars, But to go through all the trouble of terraforming a planet that is doomed in the long run seems counter productive to our needs! We pretty much know when our solar system is going to end, so I`m just saying we should look to the future and look outside our solar system! After all if we have so much time as you assume, then why not look at the big picture!

      • Anonymous

        It is a source of continual amusement when I hear people voice great concerns over our survival billions of years into the future, when there are some real questions over whether we will survive through this century. It is certain that any self-organizing system that is conscious which exists in this universe will expire at some point. If nothing else in the far future the accelerated exponential expansion of the universe means that any such system will have all energy and other resources accelerate away beyond the cosmological horizon and beyond access. Of course that is even further into the future, but there are plenty of troublesome spots along the way before then. In the case of our species the most immediate problem we face is our own inability to rein in our appetites and curb our tendency to demolish everything in our path. This is the biggest issue which confronts us, for we stand a very good chance of collapsing the life support system of this planet which sustains us.

        LC

        • Anonymous

          I agree , but I believe there is a limit to how far we should humanize mars! At best it should be some sort of fueling station, with perhaps a self containing greenhouse of some sort!

        • IVAN3MAN_AT_LARGE
          • Anonymous

            I have heard this from Fenner in the past. I think it is very possible the human condition may implode sometime this century. That may not necessarily push us into extinction, though it is impossible to say either way. Our future could be a sort of rewind of the “history VCR” where we end up back in the stone age.

            LC

          • IVAN3MAN_AT_LARGE

            Planet of the Apes? ;-)

          • Anonymous

            As we are the only species to ever gain control over our environment, we have nothing to compare to when suggesting inevitable extinction. I can think of NO scenario that ends with all of us gone, unless over the course of several millennia.

      • Anonymous

        It is a source of continual amusement when I hear people voice great concerns over our survival billions of years into the future, when there are some real questions over whether we will survive through this century. It is certain that any self-organizing system that is conscious which exists in this universe will expire at some point. If nothing else in the far future the accelerated exponential expansion of the universe means that any such system will have all energy and other resources accelerate away beyond the cosmological horizon and beyond access. Of course that is even further into the future, but there are plenty of troublesome spots along the way before then. In the case of our species the most immediate problem we face is our own inability to rein in our appetites and curb our tendency to demolish everything in our path. This is the biggest issue which confronts us, for we stand a very good chance of collapsing the life support system of this planet which sustains us.

        LC

      • Anonymous

        ALL planets are doomed in the long run. All stars are doomed in the long run. We have a good long future if we decide to not blow it. Looking beyond our solar system for help for the human species is effectively silly at our technological and societal level. Right now we have the possibility of thinking ahead to making a second world more useful. And yes, as the sun heats up (way before it ever goes red giant) Mars will become a warmer world where Earth will become useless. Those are facts and the fact that I use facts as opposed to emotional responses or goofy ideas like nuking Venus, makes me more qualified. Sorry about that.

  • d.w. kobza

    seeing as how we’ve messed up earth’s atmosphere, land, and water, perhaps it’s high time we dispense with this whole “tinkering” idea all together and begin to leave nature as is before we completely destroy not only our planet but the rest of the solar system, nay, universe as well.

    man is a nuisance. he eats up his food supply in the forest, then migrates to our green belts and ravages our crops. the sooner he is exterminated, the better.

    beware the beast man, for he is the devil’s pawn. alone among god’s primates, he kills for sport or lust or greed. yea, he will murder his brother to possess his brother’s land. let him not breed in great numbers, for he will make a desert of his home and yours. shun him; drive him back into his jungle lair, for he is the harbinger of death.

  • Anonymous

    Assuming that humanity ever develops the technology to make travel to Mars feasible, and then makes it dependable and routine, and develops the technology to terraform Mars, what makes anyone think that Earth has the resources to do the job? We can’t even manage to provide adequate nutrition and a healthy water supply to millions of people now, and our population will doubtless be vastly more by the time the technologies relative to Mars are developed. I think we are talking science-fiction-addict pipe dreams here.

  • What Now

    I read an article about this over 20 years ago. Since that time other big problems have been discovered that make terraforming Mars more difficult. Even if we could establish a denser atmosphere there and then over centuries modify it by using microorganisms Mars lacks a strong magnetic field and it’s gravity couldn’t retain the gasses indefinately. Maybe Mars has extended the lifetime of it’s atmosphere that it does have because it periodically freezes onto the surface. Anyway, aside from the UV radiation that would still reach the surface water vaper would break down into oxygen and hydrogen in the upper atmosphere and the hydrogen would leak into space. I read that this is happening to water vapor on Venus because Venus lacks a strong magnetic field as well. Wouldn’t our efforts to build an atmosphere be a losing situation, sort of like constantly having to inflate a tire that has a slow leak?

    • Anonymous

      I like your analogy of the leaking tire! Well put.

  • Dusan

    Yes!

  • http://twitter.com/Fourthletter58 Fourthletter58

    The one part everyone seems to miss on this subject is Mars no longer has a liquid spinning core, so it produces a very little magnetic field.
    Any atmosphere we try to create on Mars will just float off into space.

  • Anonymous

    All things Mars have zero value until processed here on Earth. Whether that thing be in the form of data/information, exotic mining products or a cool five pound meteorite specimen for someone’s desk.

  • Xybex R&D

    Everyone clings to Earth like it’s a giant security blanket, sucking their big thumbs. We need to grow up, after all, the Andromeda Galaxy is approaching at 300,000mph. If we have any doubts at all, watch this YouTube vid: The Future of The Milky Way 8/11 (by Obelisk155).

  • Xybex R&D

    We back up data proactively, why aren’t we making backups of planet Earth?

  • Prabhu DC

    If the Neanderthal, Australopithecus, Homo Erectus. . . planed to stick to Africa, we wouldn’t be reading this blog, would we. . .

    If we dream of inter-galactic voyages some day, we better get started with learning to live on other worlds. It would make sense though to terraform Mars in a way by not impacting the indigenous and rather learning to coexist with them.

  • Xybex R&D

    Photo: “Death Star” Galaxy Found Blasting Smaller Neighbor. http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/bigphotos/98199456.html

  • Xybex R&D

    You mean, can we watch The Ball drop on Mars, on New Years? Will it drop? Can it drop?
    Watch the results on Fear Factor…LOL.

  • Xybex R&D

    Well, at least I’m comforted by the thought that there is NO RENT to pay, ever, on Mars. No nothing…Utopia.

  • http://twitter.com/ClaireWalter ClaireWalter

    Leave it alone. We’ve done enough harm to our planet in the name of “progress.” Let’s leave our mitts off the rest of the universe.

  • Anonymous

    The idea of leaving Mars alone even if it turns out to be lifeless is silly. Pristine and unique alien environments (untouched by us nasty, evil humans) aren’t exactly scarce given the size of the universe. While we so diligently respect the integrity of the Martian environment, it’s surface is getting pounded (or should I say violated, raped?) by whatever space debris gets caught in its gravity well. This space debris is as alien to the Martian surface as is our own probes.

    Lifelessness isn’t a scarce thing either. It’s easy enough to find. Just go a few hundred miles straight up and you will find an abundance of it. Life is very scarce. Complex multi-celled life is scarcer still. There’s no guaranty that the abundant complex multi-celled life on earth will always be there. One collision with a sufficiently large asteroid can snuff it out. This could happen while our civilization is caught in a dark age (or during a period of tight fiscal budgeting, or a global war) without any technological means to prevent it. Complex life here is endangered in the long term. Endangered life should be preserved.

    Spreading earth’s life to the Martian surface (especially if it was lifeless to begin with) is an improvement. Two worlds rich with life is better than one. If you’re pining away for pristine lifeless worlds, go visit an asteroid. There are plenty of them.

  • Anonymous

    thanks all. great reading. some really funny stuff in here.

  • http://twitter.com/akihironihongo jeff

    Interesting article… If only I could live for thousands of years, maybe i would at one point be able to witness what happens…

  • Anonymous

    “It has also been suggested that Martian caves would make ideal human habitats, serving as natural protection from the harsh conditions on the surface.”
    ______________________________________

    [] Primitive men are said to have evolved into intelligent Homo sapiens, having emerged from the dim-light of caves, in primordial wilds of their early history on Earth ( a little liberal license here ): How ironic, then, would it be, if emissaries of humanity should come to descend like gods from the skies of Mars ( to settle its desolate alien expanses ), in culmination of long epic journey of Scientific and Technological advancement, which saw them rise on pillars of fire, and reach the dazzling heights of interplanetary travel, only to then witness this first adventurous generation of “off-world” representatives born of enlightenment – trek back into the dark interiors of another world’s caves!

    Homo Sapien ( “wise man” ), will then have undergone another giant transformational – space crossing – leap, to become Homo Cavernous ( “cave-dwelling man” ).

    What progress that would trumpet to the Universe!

    [] Listen! Be amazed! In sound of mighty drum-roll, a deep voice is heard with drama-raising thunder: “From another world they came!”

    ( Oohs and aahs are heard from those standing by. )

    “For what lofty purpose?” distant, shouting voices ask, electrified, with minds held amazed. “Why,” the unseen narrator excitedly, and triumphantly exclaims ( as palpable suspense builds among ranks of observers, near and far, eagerly awaiting reply ), “to enter Martian caves!”

    ( Long pause, wide-spread looks of perplexity … )

    Finally, the silence is broken with a barely audible response, heavy with disappointment, “O.” – as the light fades.
    _____________

    Epilogue: “From the caves he came, and back to the caves he has gone.”

  • http://twitter.com/TedShisler Ted Shisler

    Terraforming Mars will require a huge source of energy; the aneutronic fusion is the most promising candidate because helium-3 can be mined on Moon and boron-11 can be found on Mars to power the terraforming and spaceships for interplanetary round trips. If self-sustaining colonies become real, it will be amazing for us. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GSkxPghXTCg

  • Anonymous

    test

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