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posted by martyb on Wednesday December 12 2018, @01:27AM   Printer-friendly
from the there's-life-under-them-thar-hills! dept.

Scientists Reveal a Massive Biosphere of Life Hidden Under Earth's Surface

Earth is not the home you think it is. Far below the scant surface spaces we inhabit, the planet is teeming with an incredibly vast and deep 'dark biosphere' of subterranean lifeforms that scientists are only just beginning to comprehend.

[...] "Ten years ago, we had sampled only a few sites – the kinds of places we'd expect to find life," explains microbiologist Karen Lloyd from the University of Tennessee at Knoxville. "Now, thanks to ultra-deep sampling, we know we can find them pretty much everywhere, albeit the sampling has obviously reached only an infinitesimally tiny part of the deep biosphere."

There's a good reason why the sampling remains in its early stages. In a preview of results from an epic 10-year collaboration by over 1,000 scientists, Lloyd and fellow researchers with the Deep Carbon Observatory (DCO) estimate the deep biosphere – the zone of life under Earth's surface – occupies a volume of between 2 to 2.3 billion cubic kilometres (0.48 to 0.55 billion cubic miles). That's almost twice the volume of all the world's oceans – another enormous natural environment that lies largely unexplored by humans.

And just like the oceans, the deep biosphere is an abundant source of countless lifeforms – a population totalling some 15 to 23 billion tonnes of carbon mass (between 245 to 385 times greater than the equivalent mass of all humans on the surface).

The findings, representing numerous studies conducted at hundreds of sites around the world, are based on analyses of microbes extracted from sediment samples sourced 2.5 kilometres (1.6 miles) under the seafloor, and drilled from surface mines and boreholes more than 5 kilometres (3.1 miles) deep.


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  • (Score: 1, Interesting) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday December 12 2018, @01:44AM (1 child)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday December 12 2018, @01:44AM (#773232)

    No, the news keeps reporting the same crap with a couple new details added as great discoveries of the age. It is the result of NHST, which leads to endless publications but kills all scientific progress.

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  • (Score: 1) by khallow on Wednesday December 12 2018, @03:00AM

    by khallow (3766) Subscriber Badge on Wednesday December 12 2018, @03:00AM (#773263) Journal

    It is the result of NHST

    Doubt it. They tend to have actual evidence in geology. I suspect rather that it's really hard to study those bacteria in those places. So research tends to be incremental.