Matt Damon's stranded astronaut in "The Martian" would still have been screwed despite the just-discovered presence of water on the red planet.
"You wouldn't want to use as it as drinking water," Leslie Tamppari, MRO Deputy Project Scientist at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, told TheWrap. "The water is full of perchlorates that are actually toxic to humans."
Perchlorate is a salt that helps keep the water in a liquid state in the planet's very low temperatures. "I suppose for an astronaut if this was their only source of water, they could maybe scoop it up and with some process that I don't know, break it up and extract the water source," Tamppari said. "They would have to get the salts out — just like you don't want to drink ocean water."
On Monday, just days before the release of Ridley Scott's film, which stars Damon as an astronaut who must fend for himself on Mars after being accidentally left behind, NASA reported the discovery of flowing water on the planet.
In terms of movie publicity, the timing of the announcement was uncanny. "It's a nice bit of serendipity," Fox spokesman Chris Petrikin told TheWrap.
The discovery came too late for the filmmakers. On Monday, director Ridley Scott told the New York Times that had he known about water on Mars before production began, he would have changed the storyline with Damon's character, Mark Watney, making his own water and producing crops.
"He'd've found the edge of a glacier, definitely," Scott told the Times. "But then I would've lost a great sequence."