Press Release

Indiana University to become NASA base for space biology studies

By SpaceRef Editor
June 25, 2003
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BLOOMINGTON, Ind. — Indiana University Bloomington will soon be the headquarters
of one of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration’s new Astrobiology
Institute “lead teams,” which are research institutes working on projects
related to the search for life beyond Earth.

Based at IU and involving 18 scientists from eight research institutions, the new
Indiana-Princeton-Tennessee Astrobiology Institute (IPTAI) will be directed by
IU Bloomington biogeochemist Lisa Pratt. Other IU members are geologist Edward
Ripley, artist Ruth Droppo and Digital Media Services managers Douglas
Pearson and Michael Jasiak of University Information Technology Services.

NASA will provide IPTAI with $5 million in funding over five years, and
the institute will be able to apply for a renewal of funding in 2008.
IPTAI is one of 16 lead teams selected this year.

IPTAI’s project, titled “Detection of Biosustainable Energy and Nutrient
Cycles in the Deep Subsurface of Earth and Mars,” will employ a series of
field and laboratory experiments as well as biological samples taken from
deep inside mines to figure out the best of way of detecting life on the
two planets. As yet, no life has been detected on or under the surface of
Earth’s chilly neighbor, Mars, where the daily temperature usually tops out
around 30 degrees Fahrenheit.

Scientists from Princeton University, the University of Tennessee at Knoxville,
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory,
Oak Ridge National Laboratory, the University of Toronto, and the Universities
Space Research Association’s Lunar Planetary Institute comprise the rest of
the IPTAI team.

The NASA Astrobiology Institute is an international research consortium with
central offices located at NASA’s Ames Research Center in Mountain View, Calif.,
the agency’s lead center for astrobiology. Astrobiology is the search for the
origin, evolution, distribution and future of life in the universe.

To speak with Pratt or other IUB team members, contact David Bricker at
812-856-9035 or brickerd@indiana.edu [mailto:brickerd@indiana.edu].

Related Links:

* NASA Astrobiology Institute [http://nai.arc.nasa.gov/]

SpaceRef staff editor.