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MIT's Richard Binzel, also praised the studies, calling the findings "one more piece in the puzzle for an abundance of water arriving on Earth and having available the ingredients for life." Normally, the ice on the asteroid should have escaped Themis as a gas over thousands of years, but it's still there after a billion years or so, Campins said. That means there's likely a supply of ice inside the rock, replenishing the surface, he said. And if that's the case for other similar asteroids -- especially those that come closer to Earth -- then it would be a boon for visiting astronauts, Campins and others said. The astronauts could use the water to drink and to help make fuel. The new NASA space plan calls for astronauts to head to a nearby asteroid sometime in about 15 years as a stepping stone to Mars. The icy asteroid also just makes a mess of the differences between asteroids and their cosmic cousin, the comet. The general definition has been that asteroids are dry rocks and comets icy snowballs. Now it seems to be more a continuum of dry and icy with not much difference between asteroids and comets, Campins and others said. And that, said Andrew Rivkin of Johns Hopkins University, co-author of the other study in Nature, could wind up another cosmic controversy like the debate a few years ago about whether Pluto was a planet. Pluto wound up demoted and is now called a dwarf planet. ___ On the Net: Nature: http://www.nature.com/nature/
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