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Martian Salad Project at Whitworth University Shows Promise for Cultivating Life on Mars

Sodexo executive chef brings "Martian" farm-to-fork experiential learning opportunity to campus with NASA partnership

Martian Salad Project at Whitworth University Shows Promise for Cultivating Life on Mars

Sodexo executive chef brings "Martian" farm-to-fork experiential learning opportunity to campus with NASA partnership

Published 10-05-16

Submitted by Sodexo

Space travel is a popular topic in science and in film. “The Martian,” starring Matt Damon, saw the main character use his skills as a botanist to grow food and survive on the planet. Such a feat may seem like Hollywood hype, but scientists at NASA, with help from Sodexo, world leader in Quality of Life Services, are working together to make growing food on Mars a reality.

When NASA and the Johnson Space Center were looking for participants to study plants growing in simulated Martian soil, Timothy Grayson, Sodexo Executive Chef at Whitworth University in Spokane, WA, jumped at the opportunity to bring the project to the campus.

“We already have a Farm to Table program to educate students here at Whitworth University about growing food on campus for our use and to help our local community,” said Chef Grayson. “Adding the Martian soil simulant project fits well with our educational purpose.”

Chef Grayson received 10 lbs. of soil from a cinder cone in Hawaii called "Martian Regolith Simulant"—the closest thing to Martian soil on earth. Nicknamed “The Martian Salad Project,” the Sodexo team at Whitworth University built a greenhouse with a humidifier, fans and ultraviolet lighting. Every day, the team measures the fertilizer and water along with other data to report to NASA. Within three months, the project had successfully grown tomatoes, kale, oregano, basil and edible flowers—all from USDA organic-certified seeds.

Crops like leeks and sweet peas weren’t successful, but that isn’t stopping the Sodexo team from trying out other crops such as potatoes, which require a different set of variables. NASA plans to go a step further with the study by sending a miniature greenhouse to Mars in 2020 to test how the plants respond to the planet’s atmosphere. In the meantime, the Sodexo team at Whitworth University will continue to see what kind of harvest it can reap in “Martian soil” here on Earth.

Sodexo delivers more than 100 services across North America that enhance organizational performance, contribute to local communities and improve quality of life.

Learn more about Sodexo at its company blog, Sodexo Insights.

CONTACT:

Samuel Wells
+1 (301) 987-4893
Sodexo, Inc.
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Sodexo

Sodexo, Inc. (www.sodexoUSA.com ) is a leading integrated facilities management services company in the U.S., Canada, and Mexico, with $7.7 billion (USD) in annual revenue and 120,000 employees. Sodexo serves more than ten million customers daily in corporations, health care, long term care and retirement centers, schools, college campuses, government, and remote sites. Sodexo, Inc., headquartered in Gaithersburg, Md., is a member of Sodexo Group, and funds all administrative costs for the Sodexo Foundation (www.sodexofoundation.org ), an independent charitable organization that, since its founding in 1999, has made more than $11 million in grants to fight hunger in America.

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