Bacteria found deep below ocean floor.Earth's biosphere biosphere, irregularly shaped envelope of the earth's air, water, and land encompassing the heights and depths at which living things exist. The biosphere is a closed and self-regulating system (see ecology), sustained by grand-scale cycles of energy and of -- the area its living creatures call home -- is larger and has more life in it than scientists had realized. Studies of sediment laid down more than 4 million years ago in the Pacific Ocean reveal that bacteria are living at least 500 meters below the ocean floor. "We have a much thicker veneer veneer (vənēr`), thin leaf of wood applied with glue to a panel or frame of solid wood. The art of veneer developed with early civilization. to our planet which is living and responding to chemical inputs and geothermal inputs than we previously thought," says R. John Parkes John Grubb Parke (September 22, 1827 – December 16, 1900) was a U.S. Army engineer and a Union general in the American Civil War. Parke was born in Chester County, Pennsylvania. He graduated from the U.S. of the University of Bristol in England. Scientists had believed that pressure and heat this far below the seafloor would prevent life from establishing a foothold there, he says. They also did not imagine that microorganisms could dine off the organic matter available at such depths. But some geochemists had begun to suspect that the degradation of organic material seen in the deep ocean could be attributed in part to bacteria, Parkes notes. Other teams have reported finding microorganisms far beneath the ocean bottom, but investigators think those bacteria may have been introduced into the lower depths during drilling, Parkes asserts. To ensure that this was not a problem in their work, Parkes and his colleagues took samples at a range of depths. They found populations of organisms that were much larger than the groups above them, the team reports in the Sept. 29 LANCET. Bacterial contamination during drilling couldn't account for the deeper groups' larger numbers, Parkes contends. Using a microscope, the scientists observed the organisms directly in the sediments without growing them in laboratory cultures, he says. "Some of them we catch in the act of division" -- a sure sign of their viability, he adds. The number and activity of bacteria vary with the availability of food, the team asserts. At 360 m below the seafloor, the researchers found a significant increase in both anaerobic bacteria Anaerobic bacteria Bacteria that do not require oxgyen, found in low concentrations in the normal vagina Mentioned in: Aminoglycosides, Bacterial Vaginosis, Flesh-Eating Disease, Periodontal Disease and the methane and other hydrocarbons the creatures feed on. The scientists cultured sulfate-reducing bacteria Sulfate-reducing bacteria comprise several groups of bacteria that use sulfate as an oxidizing agent, reducing it to sulfide. Most sulfate-reducing bacteriacan also use other oxidized sulfur compounds such as sulfite and thiosulfate, or elemental sulfur. that they found 80 m below the seafloor. The DNA DNA: see nucleic acid. DNA or deoxyribonucleic acid One of two types of nucleic acid (the other is RNA); a complex organic compound found in all living cells and many viruses. It is the chemical substance of genes. of these microorganisms resembles that of organisms living closer to the surface. However, "in terms of their growth and metabolism, they are very different. They are new," says Parkes. The researchers believe the sediment samples contain additional novel bacteria. These hardy underseafloor creatures may one day prove useful in biotechnology, he adds. The Parkes team "did a very thorough and careful job," says Derek Lovley of the U.S. Geological Survey The term geological survey can be used to describe both the conduct of a survey for geological purposes and an institution holding geological information. A geological survey in Reston, Va. In addition to showing that the biosphere is bigger than previously thought, the investigators demonstrated for the first time that microorganisms continue to act on ancient, deep-ocean sediments, he says. The findings also greatly extend previous research on deep terrestrial aquifers The following is a partial list of aquifers around the world. A of aquifers is also available. North America Canada
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