This week, we’ve taken one tantalizing step closer to finding out if there really was life on Mars, after NASA’s Perseverance rover uncovered the highest concentration of organic molecules on the Red Planet to date.

The data comes from mudstones in Jezero crater, which once hosted a deep lake. Last year, researchers described a piece of rock with patterns resembling those left by microorganisms on Earth as one of the clearest signs yet of past Martian microbes.

The largest (left) and the smallest (right) skulls of Homo naledi found in the Rising Star cave system in South Africa. All specimens of H. naledi have been shown to be female.

(Image credit: Rising Star Program)

A group of people walking through a forested tunnel

The remarkably straight Stane Street in southern England was built by the Romans.

(Image credit: Tim Stocker Photography via Getty Images)

An illustration of a water molecule. New research adds credence to a controversial theory that water actually switches between two chemical structures.

(Image credit: Yaroslav Kushta via Getty Images)

People in China’s northern megacities have 74 times less fresh water than the average American — so the Chinese government has built the world’s largest water diversion project.

(Image credit: Xinmei Liu for Live Science)

A wave of warm water and higher-than-usual sea surfaces (red) stretches across the Pacific, a few days before El Niño was declared.

(Image credit: Data for the map were acquired 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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