I suppose so, but reproduction at current Martian temperatures would be incredibly slow. So I wouldn't expect much evolution to happen in 65 million years.Blind groper wrote:To mistermack
I would not totally discount the possibility that the bacteria 65 million years ago could not survive and reproduce, and consequently evolve into some better adapted to Mars. All that seems needed for bacterial life is liquid water. While Mars is less than 0 C, we know that water may remain liquid under those conditions in very thin films around dust particles. That is all that many bacteria need.
The truth is that we do not know if any life exists on Mars, and if so, where it might have come from. But the dinosaur killer impact sending Earth bacteria to Mars, and those bacteria surviving, is not impossible in theory, even if it is not probable.
But of course, bacteria that live in rocks wouldn't need to evolve much, except to cope with the cold.
There is the problem of radiation hitting the surface, which would restrict the spread of bacteria on fine grains of sand or dust.
If you combine the temperatures and the radiation effects, I think it's highly unlikely that bacteria from the dinosaur impact could colonise the surface of Mars to any great extent. But not impossible.
But I think it's far more likely that life-generated organics would date from the period when Mars had seas and rain and more life-freindly weather. How it got there would be something else.