Login
Register

Home
Bollywood
Slideshows
Entertainment
Fashion
Fashion Designers
Gossip
Health and Science
Lifestyle
Tech
Travel
About
Designer Swimwear 2010 - MBFW Miami
Ed Hardy Swimwear
L*Space by Monica Wise
Shay Todd
Ed Hardy
Tibi
Cia.Marítima
Luli Fama
Caffe

Designer Swimwear 2009 - MBFW LA
Rosa Cha Swimwear
Ed Hardy by Christian Audigier
Caroline D'Amore
Beach Bunny

Designer Swimwear 2009 - MBFW Miami
Rosa Cha Swimwear
Ed Hardy by Christian Audigier
Pistol Panties
Gottex bikini
Rosa Cha
Ashley Paige
Beach Bunny

Loading
Home > Health
Previous Next
Sub-glacial system under Antarctic ice teeming with life
Posted on Friday, December 28, 2007 (EST)
Researchers have discovered a complex sub-glacial system under the Antarctic ice, which might be teeming with life in the form of mineral-hungry microbes.
 
Print this page
Email this page

A three-man sledge on Antarctic ice
© AFP/HO/File

Washington, Dec 28 (ANI): Researchers have discovered a complex sub-glacial system under the Antarctic ice, which might be teeming with life in the form of mineral-hungry microbes.

According to a report in the National Geographic News, the watery environment under Lake Vostok, might be more than one-and-a-half times the size of the United States, making it the world’s largest wetland.

"If you peel back the ice sheet, you would expect a watery landscape similar to what we would see on the surface of Earth," said Michael Studinger, a geophysicist at the Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory of Columbia University in New York.

"This is essentially a whole new world that ten years ago we didn't know existed," he added.

Lakes in Antarctica have been isolated from the atmosphere for more than 30 million years, ebbing and flowing as they empty into the polar sea. The reason for their fluid state is because the ice sheet above acts like a gigantic down blanket, trapping heat rising from Earth's interior.

"Fifteen years ago people thought the east Antarctic ice sheet was frozen to bedrock, but now we know that's not the case," said Studinger. “This is a dramatic development in the way we look at Antarctica," he added.

This discovery holds significance to the scientific community, as the bodies of water found under the ice are fundamental to several Earth processes.

“For example, outbursts from subglacial lakes, may have a lot to do with how the continents are shaped and reshaped,” said Mahlon C. Kennicutt II, a professor of oceanography at Texas A&M University.

“The lakes may also hold an untapped wealth of climate records that could improve our understanding of how life evolved,” he added.

But the most important find is the evidence that microbes can live in the subglacial lake, deriving energy from minerals, the report states.

The search for this evidence started when John Priscu, an ecologist at Montana State University in Bozeman, began studying organisms that live in frozen ice, in 1992.

Priscu took some lake water that was refrozen at the bottom of the ice sheet above Lake Vostok and compared DNA found in the ice with DNA of organisms listed in gene banks. Several of the DNA sequences from the gene bank were similar to the DNA in the ice—suggesting comparable organisms live in the subglacial lake.

“The microbes may survive in little veins wedged between frozen crystals of ice—a pretty big house for microorganisms," Priscu told National Geographic News.

According to Priscu, if hydrothermal vents are found in Lake Vostok that resemble energy-rich, biodiverse vents in the deep ocean, even higher-order organisms could be found.

The frigid remoteness of Antarctica has one more benefit to scientists: it is a polar desert with similarities to Mars and the Jovian moon Europa.

“These comparisons may help scientists who are studying the emerging picture of life on other icy worlds,” said Priscu. (ANI)

Related Topics:

  • Antarctic glacier losing ice four times faster than a decade ago
  • Increasing Antarctic sea ice extent linked to the ozone hole
  • Unusual Antarctic microbes live life on a previously unsuspected edge
  • Greenland and Antarctic ice already melting, amounts unknown
  • Return of predatory crabs poise threat to Antarctic sea life
  • Add Your Comment



    Sawf News on mobile
    Section Headlines
    Health Topics
    Privacy