Where will the first-known extraterrestrial life come from?
Basic
12
Ṁ279
2100
29%
Other
17%
Europa
16%
Venus
13%
Mars
12%
Enceladus
4%
K2-18 b
4%
Titan
3%
TRAPPIST-1d

Aug 25, 9:57am: Where will the first extraterrestrial life be found? → Where will the first-known extraterrestrial life come from?

Answers must identify a specific astronomical body; e.g. “an asteroid” is invalid.

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How does Venus have 9%...

@ShadowyZephyr The upper cloud banks of Venus could be quite friendly to microbial life. Reasonable temperatures and pressures, abundant organic elements ..

Nasa missions planned arrivals: Europa 2030, Enceladus 2050, Venus (visited already)

"Where will the first-known extraterrestrial life come from?"

Where will the first-known extraterrestrial life come from?

To clarify this, I mean that the 'life' will apparently have come from some other place (for example another interstellar traveller like 'oumuamua) and there will be no clear explanation as to where it came from

@LivInTheLookingGlass As the description says, answers should identify a specific astronomical body. Pluto and Charon are distinct, so I'm afraid this isn't a valid answer.

@Duncan A question related to the backyard-landing and transmission scenarios:

@Duncan You're right to be annoyed; I know I find it annoying when someone says something different to what they mean. I'll try to word my questions & descriptions more carefully in the future. My apologies again.

To answer your question: if that happened, then the first-known alien life would be whatever sent the transmission, not the reproduced entity, so I'd resolve to wherever they came from.

@NcyRocks So, first, the question was originally where will it be found; I am annoyed that this has changed, since Earthlings have a long tradition of assuming that we will find extraterrestrial life when it lands its spaceship in our back yard.

BUT ANYWAY, if we receive a transmission describing how to reproduce an alien entity, and reproduce it on Earth, would this count?

@MartinRandall Extraterrestrial life can't come from Earth by definition.

@NcyRocks Earth is a specific astronomical body.

@ian I've updated the question to be clearer - my apologies that it didn't mean exactly what I intended. By the new wording, this isn't a valid answer. (Also, I'm assuming "they're already here" was a joke, right?)

@Duncan not sure! @NcyRocks what is the resolution criteria?

@ian So I won?

@Duncan They’re already here flying around n such

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