I'm a space scientist. Utah is subsidizing my research with its health.
Key takeaways
- The pride that followed this was real and deserved.
- Then I thought about Utah, and felt something more complicated.
- I study whether life could exist, or once existed, on other planets.
Why this matters: political developments that affect policy direction and public trust.
The pride that followed this was real and deserved. I felt it.
Then I thought about Utah, and felt something more complicated. As Utah s Great Salt Lake shrinks, it is becoming a valuable scientific asset — and the cost is being paid by the 2.5 million Utahns facing the severe consequences of its decline.
I am an astrobiologist. I study whether life could exist, or once existed, on other planets. To answer that question, I study places on Earth that resemble what those planets could have looked like when they still had water. I travel to salt flats, dry basins, and shorelines where the water is retreating and the minerals left behind preserve a record of what used to live there.