"Has the grinders on spirit and opportunity turned up anything that vaguely look like small fossils?"
-
Marine Subsurface is a Distinct Microbial Habitat
Researchers from NAI’s Penn State, MBL, and UCLA Teams have completed a study of the subseafloor marine biosphere, which may be one of the largest reservoirs of microbial biomass on Earth, and has recently been the subject of debate in terms of the composition of its microbial inhabitants. Their metagenomic analysis indicates that the subsurface environment is the most unique studied to date, distinct in its microbial make-up from the surface waters. The slowly-metabolizing populations may be akin to what could be found on other planets in our solar system, because such environments have much less energy available than on Earth. And because they are so deeply buried, these microbes could have survived major Earth impacts, and ensuing extinction events. Their results are published in the July 23rd Early Edition of PNAS.
- NAI Launches FAR Seminar Series on October 6th
- Early Earth Primed for Later RNA and DNA Production
- Molecules in the Atmospheres of Extrasolar Planets - A Workshop in Paris
- Cyanobacterial Biomarkers in Ancient Rocks
- Evolution of the Gut
- Jill Tarter and Will Wright Talk Gaming, Education, and Evolution in Seed Magazine's Video 'Salon'
- NASA Chooses MAVEN as the Next Mars Scout Mission
- NASA's Carl Sagan Fellows to Study Extraterrestrial Worlds
- Looking for Life on Mars in a Canadian Lake
- Mars Research in Polar Bear Country