All products featured on WIRED are independently selected by our editors. However, we may receive compensation from retailers and/or from purchases of products through these links.
__
__
__Note: This story exploded after I posted this, often in strange ways. Several updates are at bottom. __
A new paper has claimed signs of alien microbial life in a meteorite, setting the science press abuzz and leading some in the blogosphere and the twittersphere to wonder if this going to be like taking arsenic all over again. (See Phil Plait, at Bad Astronomy, for a judicious quick first look.) Even before the science itself has played out, I think I can safely say No on the Arsenic Redux question. The publication of this assertion already sharply differs from that of the notorious Arsenic Lives paper. And it differs because the journal publishing it — the Journal of Cosmology — is different. Which puts it mildly.
The Journal of Cosmology is in fact so different from any other journal, so otherworldly, that I don't know quite know what to make of the thing. But in a way, I like it, even as it's dying. The J of C drew my attention with the peer-reviewed paper, Sex on Mars: Pregnancy, Fetal Development, and Sex in Outer Space, which was part of a special issue on Mars published last fall. Here's the abstract's first sentence:
Fair enough. Here's the first paragraph of the article proper. (Forgive the comma; perhaps it was inserted to create a pause at the moment of maximum anticipation.)
Okay so right away we know this isn't the usual deal. The rest of the issue, frankly, I didn't get through, but not because it was bad or good (I didn't read enough to judge), but because it concerned space exploration, and I don't write about space or rockets and had my own work to do. Yet this brief brush with the J of C — I read the masthead, did a bit of Googling — made it obvious it was an unusual publication. It wasn't run by one of the big science publishers, like Nature or Elsevier, nor a university. It has a funky, 90s-feel website. It had voice, which alone distinguishes it from most journals.
And it seems to be driven mainly by its editor-in-chief, Rudolf Schild (rhymes with killed, not wild) a professor of cosmology at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics. Schild, who has published just shy of 300 papers, had assembled a seemingly stellar line-up of guest editors and advisors, so that looked fairly Establishment. But the journal, peer-reviewed, was published open access (free online, expensive in print), and ran a wild assortment of articles — origins of life, aline life, panspermia, cosmology of ancient cultures.
This was not a shy journal. The press release announcing the Mars issue argued, essentially, that since NASA is incompetent, the rest of the space community needs to just do Mars itself. I could be wrong, but this looks to be very much Rudy Schild's baby. And even a short trip down the Rudy Schild rabbithole on Google a) starts to explain the eccentricity and b) made me wonder why no one had written a long juicy profile of this guy. (Ferris Jabr, here is your next assignment.) If I had time and proximity I'd drive to Cambridge and do it myself. Schild looks interesting as hell. Google him, you get interviews about aliens, UFOs, and traveling on sound; his university and Wikipedia pages; and — what drew me in — his own page about his 1960 Morgan. (Back in November I found a bunch of other pages about his cars, and regret that now I can't find them.) This is a hell of a car.
He used to bring his Christmas tree home in it:
Interesting guy. He likes to think about out loud, on Paranormal TV, about what it would be like if we had contact with aliens. He thinks big.
Quite frankly I don't what to make of this. Last night, as I was tucking in my 9-year-old, he asked me, "Do you believe there's other life in the universe?" (This wasn't about the J of C paper. He'd been reading Muse, and he often thinks such things.) I told him I didn't know what to believe, I didn't know one way or another, but that I gussed there could be, because the universe is big.
Schild is less shy. He seems to believe we've got company. This colors his ideas about space exploration and, I imagine, his attitude toward papers submitted by NASA scientists claiming signs of finding such life. And why wouldn't it?
Which leads us to the very sensible standard response to the signs-of-alien-life paper he just published: As Andy Revkin noted in his post about the paper, Extraordinary claims requires extraordinary evidence. Or, as Henry Bryant Bigelow put it, "Interesting if true." I couldn't agree more. Yet if you're Rudy Schild and take it as a high probable that alien life exists, then how extraordinary is a claim that you've found signs of it? He may not hold the bar as high as we do. Yet — and here's the big difference so far between this and the arsenic fiasco — Schild seems to recognize that he must adjust his bar to ours if he wants to convince us. The J of C has promised to do something rather extraordinary in the week ahead: Publish 100 review comments from scientists to whom they sent the paper the responses from 100 requests the journal says it sent out for peer comment.
We'll see soon enough if Hooper supports this extraodinary claim with extraordinary evidence. But already this seems an extraodinary publishing event. And you can hold your breath for more. The journal's May edition, slated to be its last (this typically spirited goodbye note explains why) will be devoted to astrobiology, astrochemistry, and the pioneering work of Fred Hoyle (who coined the term "the big bang") and his colleague (and JOC editor) Chandra Wickramasinghe who along with Hoyle, coined the term: "Astrobiology."
Stay tuned.
__________
UPDATES:
Mar 3, 5:05pm GMT
Rosie Redfield, who lodged the first strong peer correction of the arsenic paper, has posted a review of this one. Her executive summary: "Move along folks, there's nothing to see here." Slightly longer v, as I understand it: The resemblances Hooper identifies (between fibrous materials in this meteor and known bacteria) are less chemical than physical and structural, and there are so many known bacteria that such similarities don't mean that much.
__________
Mar 3, 5:19pm: PZ Myers has weighed in as well, with his usual spirit. His executive summary:
He does elaborate, vigorously.
__________
__Mar 06, 2011, 7:18: __
I just received this release below from Rudy Schild, editor of the Journal of Cosmology. He now reports that he of the 100 invites he sent to peers for comments, he received 12, and will be publishing those. His full release below.
Obviously his statements below don't take into account the responses noted above from Rosie Redfield and PZ Myers.
Emphases below are mine.
__PPS, Mar 6, 2011, 10:12pm GMT: The J of C has a few words for its critics. __
I really don't know what to expect next.
__________
March 7, 2011, 7:58 GMT
__ __Phil Plait, at Bad Astronomy, files his second, more studied take on the paper itself. He doesn't buy it. It's a particularly well-considered, fair-minded post.
Also, Rosie Redfield posts a note from another NASA scientist that lends some context. Take-homes: NASA is a many-headed beast; Hoover (the meteor-bug paper's author) is an engineer, not a biologist.
And the mainstream coverage is starting to reflect the science blogosphere's skepticism. This wasn't the case 24 hours ago. For example:
Scientists skeptical of meteorite alien life claim - Yahoo! News
__________
March 7, 2011, 8:24pm GMT
SpaceRef reports that NASA released a statement explicitly distancing itself from the Hoover paper and stating that it had previously failed peer review at the Journalj of Astrobiology. Worth noting that many papers get turned down at one place before being accepted at another. NASA's statement is significant less for that news about prior rejection than for taking the trouble to distance itself from the paper publicly. Here's the statement as reproduced by SpaceRef:
__________
March 8, 2011, 6:46 am GMT
Two developments overnight:
- The Journal of Cosmology published 21 commentaries it has received from scientists it solicited comments from on the Hoover paper about signs of alien life in meteorites. I've not yet read the commentaries. I'd like it more if they linked to the evaluations registered so far by qualified people elsewhere on the net, such as Rosie Redfield and Phil Plait. If you know of other evaluations from qualified people online, please note them in the comments. If I have time amid the other two deadlines I'm working on, I'll publish a list.
- The Journal issued another press release defending its peer review. It makes some sensible points. Unfortunately, it ends with trash talk: "The choice is simple: Scientific discourse vs psychosis. Hysteria and lies do not constitute scientific doubt. They are calls for medication."
I get the feeling that somewhere, somehow, somebody at the Journal of Cosmology is trying to do something right. They just seem to be going about it all wrong.
__________
Wed, Mar 9:
I missed this yesterday: Ferris Jabr offered a concise take on the whole schmeer for New Scientist, adding some interesting context I hadn't seen before:
Related:
Is That Arsenic-Loving Bug — Formerly an Alien — a Dog?
The Wrong Stuff: NASA Dismisses Arsenic Critique Because Critical Priest Not Standing on Altar