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Lake Vostok Microbes Would Add To List Of Life In Unlikely Places

AP    
First Posted: 02/ 9/2012 1:56 am Updated: 02/ 9/2012 6:28 pm

WASHINGTON (AP) — If scientists find microbes in a frigid lake two miles beneath the thick ice of Antarctica, it will illustrate once again that somehow life finds a way to survive in the strangest and harshest places.

And it will offer hope that life exists beyond Earth.

Russian researchers reported Wednesday that they had reached Lake Vostok, a pristine body of water untouched by light or wind for about 20 million years. They want to know what type of microbial life — bacteria too small to see — might exist there.

Finding microbes may not sound like much. But they were the first form of Earth life eons before plants and animals existed.

If scientists find these tiny germs in Lake Vostok, it bolsters already strong hope that elsewhere in our solar system, life also might exist where once it didn't seem possible.

There are plenty of examples of life forms existing in the most improbable of places:

—A tiny shrimp was captured on a NASA video floating under thick ice sheets in a different part of Antarctica.

—Tubeworms somehow get needed energy from violent hydrothermal vents in the deepest Pacific and Atlantic oceans.

—A germ called "the world's toughest bacterium" by the Guinness Book of World Records and also termed "Conan the Bacterium" was found 55 years ago in a can of meat. It survives and even repairs itself in radiation that would be deadly to cockroaches.

—In the highly acidic Rio Tinto in Spain, where you dare not stick a hand, life thrives.

—In Chile's Atacama desert, so dry that scientists use it as an analog for Mars, life has been found blowing in the arid wind.

— A microbe was found in a South African gold mine that essentially lives on radioactivity in the mine.

"Everything I've learned shows just how phenomenally amazing life is, certainly its ability to adapt," said Carl Pilcher, who heads NASA's Astrobiology Institute, which studies strange life here and the prospects for it elsewhere.

In fact, scientists are hard-pressed to say where they haven't found life.

"The more we learn about life, the more we learn about its ability to grow and survive and prosper in environments that we formerly thought were too inhospitable," said David Morrison, a senior scientist at NASA's Astrobiology Institute.

University of Colorado scientist Ted Scambos is sure there will be microbes found in Lake Vostok when the long process of examining samples starts — something that may be months away because of logistical problems. He said ice many feet above the lake had bacteria, so it makes sense that the lake does.

Still, what makes Lake Vostok more important than other extreme environments is its incredible isolation.

For example, in Atacama, life probably blew in from elsewhere, NASA astrobiologist Chris McKay said. But Lake Vostok microbes, if found, could not have blown in.

More than 10 million years ago there was little or no ice there, so life could easily have existed then. But with no heat or sunlight after the ice set in, life there now would have had to find another way of getting energy, said molecular chemist and astrobiologist Steve Benner. And that's key.

If life finds a way to adapt to strange conditions in this awful place, why couldn't it live on Jupiter's moon Europa or Saturn's moon Enceladus, scientists ask. Both bodies have water trapped under crusts of ice, just like Lake Vostok, and are both prime targets in the search for life beyond Earth. The big disagreement among scientists is not about the potential for life on those two moons, but which one has the most potential and should be explored first.

It also means Mars could harbor life deep underground, McKay said.

"The broadest lesson that I think we can derive is that given liquid water, life can negotiate just about everything else," McKay said.

So far, except for the surprise shrimp that stunned a NASA Antarctic researcher and the odd tubeworms alongside ocean vents, most of the life forms are so small we can't see them. They are single-cell microbes or a tad more complex.

But that's a big deal because microbes evolve. For 90 percent of the time that life existed on Earth, there were only microbes, said Bruce Jakosky, a professor of geological sciences at the University of Colorado. Microbes are "where we come from," he said.

Jakosky and McKay said it also could eventually mean that life started in more than one place in the universe.

"If there's microbial life widespread throughout the galaxy, that increases the chances that there's intelligent life elsewhere," Jakosky said.

___

Online:

NASA's astrobiology institute: http://astrobiology.nasa.gov

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WASHINGTON (AP) — If scientists find microbes in a frigid lake two miles beneath the thick ice of Antarctica, it will illustrate once again that somehow life finds a way to survive in the strangest ...
WASHINGTON (AP) — If scientists find microbes in a frigid lake two miles beneath the thick ice of Antarctica, it will illustrate once again that somehow life finds a way to survive in the strangest ...
WASHINGTON (AP) — If scientists find microbes in a frigid lake two miles beneath the thick ice of Antarctica, it will illustrate once again that somehow life finds a way to survive in the strangest ...
WASHINGTON (AP) — If scientists find microbes in a frigid lake two miles beneath the thick ice of Antarctica, it will illustrate once again that somehow life finds a way to survive in the strangest ...
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cosmicdart
paragon of paradigms
02:55 PM on 02/11/2012
It might not be a life form based upon DNA. It might be some kind of living crystal that grows by organizing molecules around it into more crystal outcrops. If one comes in contact with a Russian, it might turn him into 150 pounds of crystals which separate and then spread out all over the world crystallizing every organism that they touch.
01:36 AM on 02/11/2012
This story would be much more entertaining if something was trying to drill it's way to the surface from underneath the ice to determine if life can exist outside of the lake.
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Micheal Johnson
02:21 PM on 02/10/2012
It seems the more life we find in remote places the closer it gets to what sci fi writers have been doing for years. I remember an artist rendition of life on Jupiter, a painting of giant gas bags floating around. Seems silly but...
06:10 PM on 02/09/2012
No. We are the only life in the universe. Remember from your religious instruction that the earth is only 15,000 years old and was created in 7 days. All this science and evolution is just an attempt to discredit the brilliant religious leaders out there teaching the literal truth of the Bible.
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cornel
wuf wuf
05:09 PM on 02/09/2012
That water must be really clean and make real good ice cubes for my Potato Vodka of the Vostok !
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doriath22
Born-again Jacobin. Robespierre had the right idea
04:04 PM on 02/09/2012
Tekeli-li!
Tekeli-li!
03:34 PM on 02/09/2012
If there are life forms there, they're probably now thinking, "Damn! Is there anywhere on Earth where we can hide from humans?"
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Gas-Bag
There's nothing endearing about perfection.
12:41 PM on 02/09/2012
I'm hoping they discover things a little more exciting (to the layman) than just microbial life. Somethings that would cause a stir and spark conversations and arguments, would be my preference, but that's just me :-)
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Bob binard
08:57 PM on 02/11/2012
Would be a cool thing to find.. Something locked away for so long..But the chances are slim..
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Gas-Bag
There's nothing endearing about perfection.
09:17 PM on 02/11/2012
I agree, but that won't stop me from daydreaming about it :-)
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Max Load
Politicians: What you see is never what you get.
12:35 PM on 02/09/2012
[Zoom in as: Scientist bends over Petri dish, micro-pipette in hand]

"Now" the scientist intones "we will sample the...wha... GACK! GGUuaa..."

[Pull back as: Scientist momentarily sways in chair, bug eyed, tendrils of slime leading from the Petri dish to his nostril slowly become coated with what appears to be blood, then begins to shake]

[Focus on micro-pipette as it begins to fall from the scientist's spasmodically jerking hand to the floor. As it hits and shatters, a klaxon begins to ululate and the clean room is bathed in pulsing red light.]
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10:51 AM on 02/09/2012
Gods are Living in LakeVostok as Microbegodthangs!! hehehe!!
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kareemachan
watashi ha tororu ga oroka da to omoi masu。
11:47 AM on 02/09/2012
Cthulhu rises....