Tuesday, June 11, 2013

Martian clay contains chemical implicated in the origin of life, astrobiologists find

June 10, 2013 ? Researchers from the University of Hawaii at Manoa NASA Astrobiology Institute (UHNAI) have discovered high concentrations of boron in a Martian meteorite. When present in its oxidized form (borate), boron may have played a key role in the formation of RNA, one of the building blocks for life.

The work was published on June 6 in PLOS ONE.

The Antarctic Search for Meteorites team found the Martian meteorite used in this study in Antarctica during its 2009-2010 field season. The minerals it contains, as well as its chemical composition, clearly show that it is of Martian origin.

Using the ion microprobe in the W. M. Keck Cosmochemistry Laboratory at UH, the team was able to analyze veins of Martian clay in the meteorite. After ruling out contamination from Earth, they determined boron abundances in these clays are over ten times higher than in any previously measured meteorite.

"Borates may have been important for the origin of life on Earth because they can stabilize ribose, a crucial component of RNA. In early life RNA is thought to have been the informational precursor to DNA," said James Stephenson, a UHNAI postdoctoral fellow.

RNA may have been the first molecule to store information and pass it on to the next generation, a mechanism crucial for evolution. Although life has now evolved a sophisticated mechanism to synthesize RNA, the first RNA molecules must have been made without such help. One of the most difficult steps in making RNA nonbiologically is the formation of the RNA sugar component, ribose. Previous laboratory tests have shown that without borate the chemicals available on the early Earth fail to build ribose. However, in the presence of borate, ribose is spontaneously produced and stabilized.

This work was born from the uniquely interdisciplinary environment of UHNAI. The lead authors on the paper, Stephenson, an evolutionary biologist, and Lydia Hallis, a cosmochemist who is also a UHNAI postdoctoral fellow, first came up with the idea over an after-work beer. "Given that boron has been implicated in the emergence of life, I had assumed that it was well characterized in meteorites," said Stephenson. "Discussing this with Dr. Hallis, I found out that it was barely studied. I was shocked and excited. She then informed me that both the samples and the specialized machinery needed to analyze them were available at UH."

On our planet, borate-enriched salt, sediment and clay deposits are relatively common, but such deposits had never previously been found on an extraterrestrial body. This new research suggests that when life was getting started on Earth, borate could also have been concentrated in deposits on Mars.

The significance goes beyond an interest in the red planet, as Hallis explains: "Earth and Mars used to have much more in common than they do today. Over time, Mars has lost a lot of its atmosphere and surface water, but ancient meteorites preserve delicate clays from wetter periods in Mars' history. The Martian clay we studied is thought to be up to 700 million years old. The recycling of the Earth's crust via plate tectonics has left no evidence of clays this old on our planet; hence Martian clays could provide essential information regarding environmental conditions on the early Earth."

The presence of ancient borate-enriched clays on Mars implies that these clays may also have been present on the early Earth. Borate-enriched clays such as the ones studied here may have represented chemical havens in which one of life's key molecular building blocks could form.

UHNAI is a research center that links the biological, chemical, geological, and astronomical sciences to better understand the origin, history, distribution, and role of water as it relates to life in the universe.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/~3/Hus74qjPe3I/130610220132.htm

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Israel signals readiness to limit settlement building for peace

JERUSALEM (Reuters) - Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu hinted on Monday that Israel was ready to confine Jewish settlement expansion to the blocs of occupied territory it wants to keep under any peace deal with the Palestinians, in a nod to U.S. efforts to revive stalled negotiations.

Settlement construction was cited as a key reason for the breakdown of U.S.-sponsored peace talks in 2010, and a stumbling block to Secretary of State John Kerry's latest efforts to revive negotiations towards founding a Palestinian state in land Israel captured in the 1967 Middle East war.

Netanyahu told Parliament's Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee that he wanted to resume peace talks, but that construction in the settlements in the West Bank would continue, "and continues today".

He added, though, that "we have to be smart about it, not just correct".

"Settlement in the blocs wouldn't substantively change the ability to reach an agreement," he said, referring to several clusters of enclaves where a majority of settlers live.

Netanyahu spoke behind closed doors and officials released some of his remarks in a statement issued later to reporters.

Israel has long said that under any peace agreement it intends to keep its largest settler enclaves built in Ariel, near the Palestinian city of Nablus, in Gush Etzion in the Bethlehem area, and in the Jerusalem area.

Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas has so far linked a resumption of peace talks to a total freeze in settlement construction, which Palestinians see as establishing facts on the ground that deny them land they need for a viable state.

One of Netanyahu's senior political partners, member of parliament Avigdor Lieberman, told Army Radio Israel was already observing a break in construction in East Jerusalem.

"One should view this as a temporary hiatus," the former foreign minister said. He added: "We have an interest in Kerry succeeding."

Israel captured East Jerusalem in the same war in which it took the West Bank, but annexed the city as part of its capital in a move never recognized internationally. Palestinians want East Jerusalem to be capital of their future state.

Since taking office in February, Kerry has visited Israel and the Palestinian territories four times in his drive to win the agreement of the sides to renew negotiations.

(Writing by Allyn Fisher-Ilan; Editing by Mark Trevelyan)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/israel-signals-readiness-limit-settlement-building-peace-182853526.html

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Monday, June 10, 2013

Asia stock markets seen cautious on China growth worries, dollar up

By Cecile Lefort

SYDNEY (Reuters) - Asian stock markets are set for a cautious start on Monday as another set of soft data from China over the weekend rekindled global growth worries, but any selling may be contained on easing concerns that the massive U.S. stimulus could be scaled back in the near future.

The U.S. dollar rose on Friday on resilient U.S. jobs data, while Wall Street rallied as investors came round to the view that the Fed would need to see firm evidence of economic strength before scaling back its bond-buying programme.

New Zealand shares opened modestly firmer, while Australian markets are closed for a public holiday.

MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan ended Friday down 1.07 percent.

The U.S. dollar jumped three-quarters of a yen in early Asian trading to hit 98.36, well off a two-month low around 95 yen hit on Friday.

Against a basket of currencies, the dollar rose 0.2 percent, pulling back from its lowest since February hit last week.

On Friday, the U.S. Labor Department's data showed job gains of 175,000 in May, slightly above the economists' forecast. But the unemployment rate increased to 7.6 percent from 7.5 percent in April, easing concerns that the Fed may be reducing its stimulus in the near future, boosting U.S. stocks.

The dollar's extended rally from Friday may have been driven by safe-haven demand after weekend data in China showed unexpected weakness in May trade and domestic activity struggling to pick up.

The data underscores rising risks that China's economic growth will slide further in the second quarter, dealing a blow to global growth prospects as investors fret over an uneven recovery in the U.S. and a deep slump in Europe.

"The China train is hardly derailing, but it does seem to be running out of puff somewhat for the moment," wrote ANZ Bank, having revised GDP growth expectations to 7.6 percent this year, from 7.8 percent.

The Antipodean currencies were the hardest hit with the Australian dollar plumbing more than one percent to $0.9413, its lowest in 20 months.

It fell as deep as $0.9393 in early trade, very near key support of $0.9388. A break would take it to the lowest since September 2010.

The Aussie dollar has lost 12 percent in just two months.

The kiwi dollar slipped 0.6 percent to $0.7836, pulling closer to its lowest in 11 months.

Australia and New Zealand are very sensitive to news out of China, a key export market.

(Editing by Shri Navaratnam)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/asia-stock-markets-seen-cautious-china-growth-worries-000627440.html

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Nadal wins 1st set of French final against Ferrer

PARIS (AP) ? Rafael Nadal has won the first set in his French Open final against fellow Spaniard David Ferrer, 6-3.

Nadal is seeking to become the first man to win eight titles at the same Grand Slam event, while Ferrer is a first-time major finalist.

Anticipated rain held off for the start on a gray, cool afternoon Sunday. Nadal broke three times in the opening set and won the final three games.

Nadal is seeking his 12th Grand Slam title, which would move him into a tie for third place with Roy Emerson behind Roger Federer's 17 and Pete Sampras' 14.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/nadal-wins-1st-set-french-final-against-ferrer-140536176.html

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Police searching for motive behind Calif. shooting



>>> tonight while we've learned who the apparent gunman was in the deadly rampage at santa monica community college in california friday, police are trying to determine his motive. this is a fifth victim, a student, has died from her wounds. now the latest on the investigation.

>> reporter: this was the moment police say that gunman entered the liar braer brary at santa monica college armed to kill. the shooter is a 23-year-old student once enrolled at the college.

>> the police department did have contact with this individual in 2006 . however, because the individual was a juvenile at the time, i am not at liberty to discuss circumstances of the contact.

>> reporter: police are investigatesing what may have motivated the gun plan to go on a calculated shooting rampage.

>> i would presume that any time someone puts on a vest, comes out with a bag full of loaded magazines, has a handgun, lass a semi- automatic rifle and car jacks folks, goes to a college, kills more people, i would say that's premeditated.

>> reporter: it began friday around noon when shots were reported near a house on fire. law enforcement sources say zawahiri allegedly targeted and killed his father and brother inside that home, then hijacked the car demanding the driver take him to the college campus . along the way opening fire on a city bus . once on campus official say zawahiri enters the library and it was there zawahiri was shot and killed by police. some of the 1,300 rounds of ammunition, weapons and gear the suspect were carrying were recovered on campus. today the college community mourned it would have its own, 26-year-old marcella franco, a student, and her father, carlos, a groundskeeper.

>> her father was very well liked and respected.

>> reporter: the two were driving on the campus when their car was attacked. now counselors have called to help grieving students. nbc news, los angeles .

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/653381/s/2d0ede82/l/0Lvideo0Bmsnbc0Bmsn0N0Cid0C52151931/story01.htm

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5 things to know about Iran's presidential vote

TEHRAN, Iran (AP) ? Iran's presidential election is June 14. Here are five things you should know:

THE FIELD

Iran's election overseers allowed eight candidates on the ballot to succeed President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who cannot run again because of term limits. Most are solid loyalists to the ruling Islamic theocracy, headed by Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. Among the main questions: Will pro-reform voters rally behind one of the relative moderate candidates or boycott in protest of the relentless crackdowns in recent years?

WHO REALLY RULES

The Iranian president does not have a direct say in major policies such as the country's nuclear program or relations with the West. Those decisions are in the hands of the ruling clerics and its defenders, including the powerful Revolutionary Guard. The presidency, however, can help sway views. The president also directs the economy, which is an increasingly important role as international sanctions bite deeper over Tehran's nuclear program.

RAFSANJANI REBUFF

One of the major backstories of the election is the decision to bar former President Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani from the ballot. The ruling clerics appeared worried that Rafsanjani would revive the opposition movement, which has been shattered by security forces. But blocking Rafsanjani deeply tarnished Iran's claims of a free election.

TIGHT SECURITY

Iran's security forces are on high alert. In 2009, massive protests rocked the country after Ahmadinejad's rivals claimed the outcome was rigged in his favor. There have been no indications of widespread demonstrations this time. Authorities, however, are clamping down on everything from pro-reform gatherings to social media.

OPPOSITION UNDER WRAPS

The leaders of the 2009 protests, Mir Hossein Mousavi and Madhi Karroubi, have been under house arrest since early 2011. Both ran against Ahmadinejad and alleged vote fraud. Mousavi is a former prime minister. Karroubi served as speaker of Iran's parliament.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/5-things-know-irans-presidential-vote-171755252.html

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