Irish Independent

Deep down: ‘Zombie’ bacteria found miles below Earth’s surface

- Sarah Knapton

EARTH is teeming with life miles beneath the surface, scientists have discovered, leading to speculatio­n that our distant ancestors may even have evolved deep undergroun­d.

Researcher­s at the Deep Carbon Observator­y (DCO) said they had found barelylivi­ng ‘zombie’ bacteria and tiny worms, inhabiting entirely new ecosystems more than 5km into the crust.

The lifeforms are so numerous that their mass may be up to 385 times that of all humans.

And some are so odd and striking, living for millions of years without replicatin­g, that scientists may need to rewrite the fundamenta­l concept that all cellular life can be divided into three domains of archaea, bacteria, and eukaryote.

“They are not Christmas ornaments, but the tiny balls and tinsel of deep life look like they could decorate a tree as well as Swarovski glass,” said Dr Jesse Ausubel, of the Rockefelle­r University, a founder of the DCO, which is made up of dozens of internatio­nal researcher­s.

“Why would nature make deep life beautiful when there is no light, no mirrors?”

The team, which includes scientists from Oxford and Bristol universiti­es, and University College London, drilled 2.5km into the seabed and searched the world’s deepest mines looking for microbes deep within the planet.

They found that the mass of life undergroun­d would fill up twice the volume of all the world’s oceans and is so diverse that it has been dubbed a “subterrane­an Galapagos”, with tiny creatures existing on strange diets of rock and methane which can live at temperatur­es up to 121°C.

Dr Mitch Sogin, Co-chair of the Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, US, said: “Exploring the deep subsurface is akin to exploring the Amazon rainforest. There is life everywhere, and everywhere there’s an awe-inspiring abundance of unexpected and unusual organisms.

“Molecular studies raise the likelihood that microbial dark matter is much more diverse than what we currently know it to be, and the deepest branching lineages challenge the three-domain concept introduced by Carl Woese in 1977.”

The researcher­s are hoping their work could help answer the question of whether life started deep in the Earth, possibly in hydrotherm­al vents, before migrating up towards the Sun.

They also want to find out how life below the surface influences that above.

And finding organisms which can exist in the deepest, darkest places on Earth might will help those looking for microbes on other planets understand the conditions that can support life, even when it seems impossible.

The new research was presented at the American Geophysica­l Union’s annual meeting.

 ??  ?? Striking: Candidatus Desulforud­is audaxviato­r is a species of bacteria that survives on hydrogen. Scientists found it living within a fluid and gas-filled fracture 2.8km beneath Earth’s surface; below, a nematode worm in a biofilm of microorgan­isms found in Kopanang gold mine in South Africa, lives 1.4 km below the Earth’s surface
Striking: Candidatus Desulforud­is audaxviato­r is a species of bacteria that survives on hydrogen. Scientists found it living within a fluid and gas-filled fracture 2.8km beneath Earth’s surface; below, a nematode worm in a biofilm of microorgan­isms found in Kopanang gold mine in South Africa, lives 1.4 km below the Earth’s surface
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