Found this when searching on Google for the journal article discussed:
Mars organics get new lease on life.
Viking mission may have destroyed compounds that make biology possible while trying to detect them.
By Ron Cowen
Web edition : Wednesday, September 8th, 2010
"...when Navarro-González and his colleagues added 1 percent by weight magnesium perchlorate to soil from the Atacama Desert in Chile, which is thought to closely resemble Martian soil and is known to contain organic compounds, they found an intriguing result. Heating the perchlorate-adulterated desert soil to temperatures comparable to those in the Viking experiments produced the same chlorinated organic compounds that were found by the landers in 1976 but dismissed as contaminants. Nearly all the organic compounds originally in the Chilean soil were destroyed during the heating.
Similarly, the team says, the soil at the two Viking sites likely contained plenty of organics that were destroyed upon heating and were turned into chlorinated methane compounds due to the presence of perchlorate.
“
The bottom line of this work is that the Viking landers did detect organics on Mars, we just did not realize it,” McKay asserts. He and his colleagues estimate that the Martian soil contains a few parts per million of organics, comparable with the driest parts of the Atacama Desert."
http://www.sciencenews.org/view/gene..._lease_on_life
I'm surprised that McKay would say that. McKay is a highly regarded Mars expert. In the other articles on this research I've read, the researchers opinions were that Viking could have missed the organics. But here McKay is being more definitive in that he thinks they were there and gives an estimate of the amounts.
Bob Clark