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Our Alien Earth

The search for life begins at home.

In this NASA+ documentary series, follow NASA scientists into the field as they explore the most extreme environments on Earth, testing technologies that directly inform NASA missions to detect and discover extraterrestrial life in the universe.

Episodes

Title image for episode 5 of Our Alien Earth, depicting an aeriel view of sand dunes, with mountains looming in the background, and campsite of many tents in the foreground.

Episode 5: The Great Sand Dunes of Kobuk Valley, Alaska

Soar above the Great Sand Dunes of Alaska's Kobuk Valley with Dr. Cynthia Dinwiddie and her team as they use ground-penetrating radar and other techniques to map the subsurface environment. If microbial life could live beneath the sand on Earth, could similar life survive the conditions of Mars, and Saturn's moon, Titan?

Title image for episode 4 of Our Alien Earth, depicting an aerial view of the lava fields of Mauna Loa, Hawai'i, while another volcano, Mauna Kea, looms in the background.

Episode 4: The Lava Tubes of Mauna Loa, Hawai’i

Explore beneath the volcanoes of Hawai’i with four teams of NASA astrobiologists as they investigate how life might survive in the subsurface of other worlds. Inside cavernous lava tubes, these scientists search for microbial life in volcanic rock, analyze subsurface gases, and build an augmented reality model of the field site—all to help advance NASA’s future exploration of Mars and beyond.

Teaser Trailer
Cinematic Trailer

Title image for episode 3 of Our Alien Earth, depicting an aerial view of the Aegean sea and the islands of Greece.

Episode 3: The Undersea Volcanoes of Santorini, Greece

Dive alongside Dr. Richard Camilli and his team as they explore undersea volcanoes off the coast of Santorini, Greece. Testing a suite of autonomous underwater vehicles, the team hopes to imbue their robotic explorers with the same scientific reasoning of a human astrobiologist, helping us characterize alien oceans and remotely search for signs of life on distant ocean worlds.

The Making of Episode 3
Cinematic Trailer

Title image for episode 2 of Our Alien Earth, depicting a view of a glacier, valley, and lake in the Isua Greenstone Belt of Greenland.

Episode 2: The Ancient Isua Greenstone Belt, Greenland

Journey into the wilderness of Greenland alongside Dr. Abigail Allwood and her team, as they investigate a controversial claim of ancient signs of life in an outcrop of rocks that are over 3.7 billion years old. Watch as they continue to develop virtual reality technology that is currently being used by NASA’s Mars Exploration Program to bring scientists to sites visited by our Martian rovers.

Title image for episode 1 of Our Alien Earth, depicting an aerial view of a flooded plain of volcanic rock in Iceland

Episode 1: The Lava Fields of Holuhraun, Iceland

Go off-road with Dr. Amanda Stockton and her team as they venture into the lava fields of a recently-erupted volcano, studying how quickly microbial life on Earth recovers from such a catastrophic event. Follow the expedition team as they use drones to map the field site, take samples of volcanic rock, and perform laboratory analyses; all mimicking the same exploration and science performed by the Mars Curiosity and Perseverance rovers.

Meet the Director

Mike Toillion

NASA Astrobiology

Since joining NASA in 2012, Mike has been an astrobiology science communicator and storyteller about NASA's search for life on other worlds. He has created documentaries for NASA+, the Mars Exploration Program, and the NASA Astrobiology Program, including Our Alien Earth, The Australian Outback & the Search for Life, and the live web talk show, Ask an Astrobiologist.

Mike received a News & Documentary Emmy Award for Outstanding Live News Special for his cinematography work in The 2024 Total Solar Eclipse: Through the Eyes of NASA.

Mike Toillion, filmmaker for the NASA Astrobiology Program, dressed in winter hiking gear, posing on a snowy hillside holding a camera.
Mike Toillion, filmmaker for the NASA Astrobiology Program, posing on the trail up to Mount Massive in Colorado.
NASA

FAQ

  • 01

    What can exploring Earth tell us about exploring other planets?

    In order to better understand planetary environments beyond Earth, NASA scientists explore analog environments, places with similar conditions and qualities to other worlds in the universe. For those looking for life on Mars, lava flows in Iceland or cold-climate sand dunes in Alaska might be good locations for research. Others looking for life on ocean worlds, like Europa, may take to the deep sea to research hydrothermal vents.

    Our Alien Earth takes you along for the ride in planetary analog field expeditions just like these, to show how extreme environments on Earth can teach us a lot about other worlds in our solar system and beyond.

    For more information, please visit https://science.nasa.gov/solar-system/planetary-analogs/

  • 02

    What is astrobiology?

    Astrobiology is the study of the origin, evolution, and distribution of life in the universe.

    NASA’s Astrobiology Program investigates life in the universe on many levels: how it began, how it evolved here on Earth, and where it might exist elsewhere. One of its many research endeavors is supporting field research of planetary analog environments and instrument development, all of which informs and contributes to NASA's missions to explore worlds beyond Earth.

    For more information about astrobiology at NASA, please visit https://science.nasa.gov/astrobiology/

An aerial shot of a green, off-road jeep drives through a flooded plain, sending water into the air as it drives across an Icelandic landscape.
Dr. Amanda Stockton, leader of an expedition to Iceland, drives a landcruiser through a flooded plain as they leave their field site.
NASA/Mike Toillion

Ways to Watch

NASA Plus logo with the text The universe at your fingertips. A planet is in the background.

NASA+

Watch the series on NASA+ on the web.

A desktop monitor displaying displaying a scene from Our Alien Earth featuring a NASA scientist dressed in field expedition clothing and carrying scientific equipment walking across lava fields in Hawai'i.

YouTube

Watch the series on YouTube.

Two phones, the left one displaying Our Alien Earth on the NASA+ App. The right screen shows a NASA scientist dressed in field expedition clothing and carrying scientific equipment walking across lava fields in Hawai'i.

More Ways to Watch

Stream NASA+ from 3rd-party streaming services.