Living Above the Tree Line, Inside a Rock :: Astrobiology Magazine - earth science - evolution distribution Origin of life universe - life beyond :: Astrobiology is study of earth science evolution distribution Origin of life in universe terrestrial
Skip to page main content
NASA Logo - Astrobiology Magazine - earth science - evolution distribution Origin of life universe - life beyond: Astrobiology is study of earth science evolution distribution Origin of life in universe terrestrial + Astrobiology Portal
+ NASA Home
FIND IT @ NASA
NASA HomepageAstrobiology Magazine - earth science - evolution distribution Origin of life universe - life beyond: Astrobiology is study of earth science evolution distribution Origin of life in universe terrestrial
Home Science and Research Datasets and Images Publications Multimedia
News flash!
Astrobio.net is getting a makeover!
Click here to submit your Poll
Great Debates
Benefits_of_Hard_Bodies

Benefits of Hard Bodies
Main Menu
Today's Story
Today's most-read story is:

Dark Moon Cooling
Other Stories
 
Living Above the Tree Line, Inside a Rock
Extreme Life Summary (Dec 14, 2004): Are there places on Earth devoid of life? One of the most barren spots on the planet is above the tree line, where glaciers strip the land of nutrients and life. But enough dissolved organics may flow in melting streams to point to microbial life where no life was previously imagined.

Display Options: Send this story to someone Printer-friendly page _FAX _PDF _RTF _XLS _PALM _XML _WML _S2D _ESP _PS _TTS Larger font Smaller font


British Antarctic Survey

Living Above the Tree Line, Inside a Rock

based on U. Colorado, Boulder report

Mars_pool
This artist's representation shows a standing pool of water on Mars -- impossible today, but what of the future? Scientists consider the possibilities in "Once Upon a Water Planet."
Image Credit: Duane Hilton

Scientists have discovered evidence of microbial activity in a rock glacier high above tree line in the Rocky Mountains, a barren environment previously thought to be devoid of life.

Found in an intermittent stream draining from the glacier, the evidence includes traces of dissolved organic material and high levels of nitrates, said Mark Williams, a scientist at Colorado University (CU)-Boulder. The high nitrate levels are believed to be a result of microbes metabolizing nitrogen within the glacier, said CU-Boulder graduate student Meredith Knauf.

Knauf gave a presentation on Dec. 13 about the discovery, at the Fall Meeting of the American Geophysical Union, held in San Francisco, Calif.

Rock glaciers are large masses of rock debris interspersed with ice in the high mountains of temperate areas. Moving at speeds of just inches or a few feet a year, rock glaciers require an extremely cold environment, large amounts of rock debris and enough of a slope to allow them to slide.

sandstone_algae
Sandstone algae found in Antarctic rocks.
Credit: British Antarctic Society-BAS

Williams said the microbial "signature" discovered by the team in the rock glacier, located in the Green Lakes Valley watershed 30 miles west of Boulder, Colo., is similar to that found recently in semi-frozen lakes in the Dry Valleys of Antarctica. The unexpected discovery of microbes in that hostile Antarctica region has enthused scientists hunting for life in inhospitable environments, he said.

The Green Lakes Valley watershed is part of the Niwot Ridge Long-Term Ecological Research (LTER) site supported by the National Science Foundation (NSF). Niwot Ridge is the only one of NSF's 26 LTER sites worldwide that is located in a sub-alpine and alpine environment.

"The finding that similar microbes occupy similar habitats in Colorado and Antarctica should spur other discoveries elsewhere in these environments," said Henry Gholz, director of NSF's LTER program. "The challenge now is to explain the role of these microbes in the ecosystem."

Added Williams, "Rock glaciers are not biological deserts as had been previously thought. This is one more example that microbes can live in the most extreme of environments."

artist's conception of cryobot melting down ice cap
Concept artwork shows the Active Thermal Probe (Mars Cryobot) melting down through the northern ice cap on Mars.
Credit: NASA JPL

Both the amount of dissolved organic matter and nitrate levels from microbial activity in the rock glacier rose dramatically from the late spring to the early fall in 2003, said Knauf. "This increase indicates that the biological signal is coming from meltwater inside the rock glacier, rather than from terrestrial microbial activity in the tundra around it," she said.

The dissolved organic carbon molecules from the rock glacier, which are large and complex, are very similar in structure to molecules found by the researchers in Antarctica, said Knauf. "The microbial activity we are seeing appears to be much more like what researchers have found in the Dry Valleys of Antarctica than anything found in North American temperate areas," she said.

Microbes, which are microscopic, single-celled organisms, have been found in boiling water in deep-sea ocean vents, clinging to ice in subterranean polar lakes and living in rocks two miles underground. Such microbes, known popularly as "extremophiles," also have been found living inside of nuclear reactors and even in the brickwork of 4,800-year-old Peruvian pyramids.

Antarctic_moss
Mossy Hypoliths colonizing an Antarctic rock. Credit: BAS

Because scientists suspect that Earth's most extreme environments resemble environments found on distant planets, such examples of extremophiles on Earth have caught the interest of astrobiologists, said Williams. "Parts of Antarctica are seen as an analog to environments on Mars by researchers, and we see this rock glacier environment as a new analogue to Antarctica," he said.

Microbes, which have been shown to metabolize elements like iron, nitrogen and sulfur, appear to require water in order to live, grow and reproduce. Previously at the Niwot Ridge study area, microbes living under the tundra snow pack have been shown to be active in sub-zero conditions, breaking down plant material and metabolizing nitrogen in the dead of winter, Williams said.

After the discovery in the Green Lakes Valley, the CU-Boulder research team discovered evidence of microbial life in rock glaciers in southern Colorado and in Wyoming, said Knauf.
Other CU-Boulder researchers involved in the study include Nel Caine, Rose Cory and Fengjing Liu.

Related Web Pages

Could Opportunity Find Life on Mars?
Evidence of bacteria on Europa?

New Signs of Polar Life
NSF Life in Extreme Environments (LEXEN) Program
Introduction to the Archaea - Life's extremists
Life without Volcanic Heat

Note: Extreme Life
Display Options: Send this story to someone Printer-friendly page _FAX _PDF _RTF _XLS _PALM _XML _WML _S2D _ESP _PS _TTS Larger font Smaller font

Tuesday, December 14, 2004
 
Credits Feedback Related Links Sitemap
FIRST GOV + Privacy, Security, Notices
+ Syndication Help
+ RSS Syndication
+ NASA Ames Astrobiology Portal net
Home Page + Chief Editor & Executive Producer: Helen Matsos
+ Site & Server Maintenance : Turbo Inc.