NASA’s Curiosity Rover, which last month sent back its first pictures from Mars, is another step in the attempt to answer these questions, and to find out whether or not we are alone in the universe and our planet a solitary life-raft in the emptiness of space.
Coinciding with this event, the most recent issue of Daedalus – the journal of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences – carries an essay by the eminent planetary scientist James F. Bell, entitled ‘The Search for Habitable Worlds: Planetary Exploration in the 21st Century’. In his essay, Bell fascinatingly outlines the pre-history and recent achievements of planetary exploration, and points to where the search for life is likely to continue, in and beyond our Solar System.

Tillman goes on to offer some practical solutions to alleviate the worst effects of our need for land and natural resources to support our growing populations. However, whether the same ingenuity that has enabled us to send probes to Mars and across the Solar System will allow us to sustain life on Earth in anything like its present diversity very much remains to be seen.
Both these articles, along with further issues of Daedalus, can be read in the Wellcome Library, in either the print or online versions.
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