Scientists Say Life is Possible in Oil – Could Aliens Survive on Other Planets?
Pitch Lake in Trinidad - scientists have discovered microbes living in water droplets within the oil deposits(MartinaJackson, Wikimedia Commons)
A group of scientists from several universities have
discovered tiny microbes living in microscopicdroplets of water in an
asphalt lake on Earth and say that this could mean there is the potential forlife
on other planets, such as Titan, the largest moon on Saturn.
Researchers studying Pitch Lake in Trinidad, the
largest naturally occurring asphalt lake on Earth where black oil deposits ooze
across an area of roughly 114 acres, found that to their surprise, microbes
were surviving in water droplets as small as 1 microliter (one-fifth the size
of a drop of water).
"Oil was considered to be dead," said lead study author
Rainer Meckenstock, an environmental microbiologist at Germany's Helmholtz
Zentrum München.
"The microbes most likely were enclosed in droplets in the
deep subsurface and ascended together with the oil."
Their research, entitled "Water droplets in oil are
microhabitats for microbial life" is detailed in the latest issue of the
journal Science.
Oil has long been considered to be too toxic for life, but the researchers discovered
that each water droplet was host to a mini-ecosystem of microbes that were
breaking the oil down into a variety of organic molecules.
It is unlikely that the water came from rain, but rather from
either ancient seawater or brine from deep underground beneath the lake that
rose up within the oil.
Titan has hydrocarbon lakes on its surface and the scientists are
now wondering whether mixtures of water and ammonia might have been
able to rise to the surface of Titan's lakes from below.
Although the microbes are able to break oil down, it is unlikely
that the deposits will disappear any time soon as the microbes and droplets of
water are much less compared with the amount of oil in the lake.
The researchers want to work out how life in the
mini-ecosystems functions in order to find out how these organisms are
able to live and whether organisms could similarly adapt to survive
in a hydrocarbon lake
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