No. No one can be living in Martian soil.
Yes martian soil does have nutrients such as sodium.
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Clay is a common componet of soil, it has always been known about, as long as humans have existed they have known about clay. The same answer could have been given if you had asked when was wood, or water discovered.
Plant life is dependent on soil because plants are rooted in the soil and get their life-sustaining nutrients from it.
soil is life
Yes martian soil does have nutrients such as sodium.
No hardware sent to Mars has ever been returned to Earth, and nothing that's landed on the Martian surface has ever been launched from it.
BENEATH THE MARTIAN SOIL.
From iron in the Martian soil.
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The closest thing to "signs of life" that's been found on Mars so far has been marks on the topographybelieved to have been carved by liquid water at some time in the distant past.No living organisms, or their carcasses, or their effluent, have been detected in the Martian soil, andno giraffes have yet pranced through the view of any camera carried by a Mars probe.
can u elp me The ground on Mars or Martian soil as it has been named is completely different from the soil we have on earth. Earths soil is made up of organic substances whereas Martian soil has no organic substances. It is made up of very small particles of regolith which includes sand, dust, soil and broken rocks. It is this dust like covering that gives Mars its red colour.
Clay is a common componet of soil, it has always been known about, as long as humans have existed they have known about clay. The same answer could have been given if you had asked when was wood, or water discovered.
Mars does not have any plant life and there is no absolute evidence that it ever did. Some Earth-type plants might survive in the cold, dense air of the Martian poles, but there is no liquid water at all on the surface.
no some are different plants like the been cannot life in the clay soil.
anywhere with good soil
The Phoenix Mars lander discovered evidence of water ice near the surface of Mars in the form of subsurface ice. It also found chemical elements and compounds necessary for supporting life, such as perchlorate salts and water vapor. Additionally, the lander detected snowfall and measured the mild alkaline nature of the Martian soil.