Astrobiology: Life in the Universe

Astrobiology Science and Technology for Exploring Planets (ASTEP)


  1. Seminar Detail

    A Subsurface Biota in the Archean?

    A Subsurface Biota in the Archean?

    Presenter: Roger Buick

    May 20, 2003 12:00 AM Pacific

    Though a large subsurface biota is thought to exist on
    Earth now, it is unclear whether this has always been so. The issue is,
    however, important because early in planetary history, subsurface
    environments might have been more habitable than surface sites and indeed
    might have formed refuges for life against the vagaries of meteoritic
    bombardment. It is even possible that if the earliest organisms were
    thermophilic chemolithotrophs, life might have originated in a subsurface
    hydrothermal setting. Here I critically examine the empirical evidence for
    the existence of a subsurface biota early in Earth's history during the
    Archean era, concluding that there are strong but not totally compelling
    data supporting the occupation of subsurface habitats by the mid-Archean.

    Participation Instructions

    http://nai.arc.nasa.gov/seminars/instructions.cfm

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