NASA Symposium Marks 50-Year-Search for Signs of Life in Universe

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Oct. 7, 2010

Dwayne C. Brown                                         
Headquarters, Washington                                     
202-358-1726 
dwayne.c.brown@xxxxxxxx 

Linda Billings 
George Washington University, Washington 
703-635-9799 
libillin@xxxxxxx 
MEDIA ADVISORY: M10-140

NASA SYMPOSIUM MARKS 50-YEAR-SEARCH FOR SIGNS OF LIFE IN UNIVERSE

WASHINGTON -- Media representatives are invited to attend a NASA 
symposium on Thursday, Oct. 14, from 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. EDT, where 
world-renowned scientists will address past, present, and future 
activities in the search for signs of life in the universe. The event 
will take place at the Lockheed Martin Global Vision Center in 
Crystal City, Va. NASA Television's Education channel and the 
agency's Web site will provide live coverage via a Lockheed Martin 
Webcast at: 



http://www.livestream.com/astrobiology50th 


Scientists from NASA and around the world are celebrating a half 
century of astrobiology research. Astrobiology is the study of the 
origin, evolution, distribution and future of life in the universe. 
George Washington University in Washington consults with NASA in this 
arena and helped organize the speakers for the symposium. 

Speakers include former NASA Administrator Daniel Goldin; James E. 
Lovelock of the University of Oxford; and Lynn Margulis of the 
University of Massachusetts-Amherst. Lovelock and Margulis are early 
NASA astrobiology investigators and co-developers of the Gaia theory, 
which proposes that Earth and all of its life forms function as a 
single interconnected system. Other notable speakers are Steve 
Squyres of Cornell University in Ithaca, N.Y.; Nobel laureate Baruch 
Blumberg; and planetary habitability researcher Victoria Meadows of 
the University of Washington in Seattle. 

For a complete list of speakers, visit: 



http://www.nasa.gov/topics/universe/features/astrobiology_50th.html 


Media representatives interested in attending should send an email to 
Dwayne Brown at dwayne.c.brown@xxxxxxxxx International journalists 
should provide their nationality, passport number and expiration date 
by 6 p.m. EDT, Monday, Oct. 11. Domestic journalists should include 
their affiliation and office phone number by 6 p.m. EDT, Tuesday, Oct 
12. 

For more information about NASA astrobiology activities, visit: 



http://astrobiology.nasa.gov 

	
-end-



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