Earth's Most Mars-Like Places Could Hold Clues to Extraterrestrial Life

The salt pan at Chott el Jerid in Tunisia is similar to environments found on Mars.
(Image credit: Felipe Gómez/Europlanet)

In an effort to learn whether Mars could host life, scientists have been trekking to some of the most Mars-like places on Earth.

These spots, such as the freezing Antarctic, dried-out salt pans in Tunisia, and the corrosively acidic Rio Tinto river in Spain, often host life on our own planet, so the question remains: Can similar locales support organisms beyond Earth?

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