Chile's Atacama desert may seem to contain little besides red-grey rocks and sand—but scientists are busy searching here for clues to life in a place it much resembles: Mars.
This desert in northern Chile, like the red planet, is hot, dusty and extremely dry.
Yet life exists here: tiny algae and bacteria that have evolved to survive in the parched earth on little more than sunlight.
If they have done it here, then why not on Mars, 225 million kilometers (140 million miles) away?
"If life existed there, it would probably be very similar to life here," says biologist Cristina Dorador from the nearby University of Antofagasta.
"We do not know if that is the case, because we do not have any evidence," she adds, as she breaks up bits of rock salt in an area of the desert known as Yungay Station.
"But if we manage to understand how these micro-organisms live, how they obtain moisture and how they adapt to these conditions, then probably very soon, when we have more information about life forms on other planets, we will have something here on Earth to compare it with."
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