'Not necessarily science fiction'

Research on the other planets in our solar system, and beyond, is starting to show "they may have harboured life in the past, and then, on top of that, there's environment that we're uncovering right now in the planets, and moons in particular, that may be conducive for life today, so it's a very exciting time for us," said Green.

James Green director of planetary science NASA

James Green, director of planetary science at NASA headquarters in Washington, D.C. says this is "exciting time" for researchers studying the origins of life in the universe. He is speaking in Thunder Bay, Ont., on Wednesday. (NASA)

It is becoming increasingly possible that it could one day be science fact, "not necessarily science fiction" that intelligent life exists elsewhere in the universe.

"Every step we take we get positive indications that something unusual is going on that we need to investigate further," said Green.

'What is our destiny?'

Sometimes that investigation offers hints of what may be to come, for those of us who call Earth home.

"What is our destiny of this species as we go millions of years into the future?," said Green, noting that Earth may not be in the safest location in the solar system, due to the presence of a large number of near-Earth objects, which have collided with our planet in the past, and will likely do so again in the future.

He points to the Earth's rock record, which suggests an impact with a nearby object of a significant size sending an enormous amount of debris into the atmosphere, blocking out the sun and leading to the extinction of more than 80 per cent of the life that existed on the planet at the time.

"The dinosaurs didn't have a space program and they became extinct."

Green's presentation, The Search for Life Beyond Earth, in Space and Time, begins at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday March 8 in ATAC 1003 at Lakehead University.

The presentation will be livestreamed.

NASA poster James Green search for life

James Green, director of planetary science at NASA, says the search for life beyond Earth is one of the fundamental areas of inquiry of our time. (Lakehead University)