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A 'subterranean Galapagos' inside the Earth (2018)

109 pointsby FeaturelessBugabout 2 years ago

10 comments

rolenthedeepabout 2 years ago
I find the extent of life on this planet just fascinating. Life is absolutely everywhere you care to look. As long as there&#x27;s raw resources, energy, and not too hot to destroy organic molecules, you&#x27;ll find life.<p>Even those basic requirements are not as clear-cut as you&#x27;d expect. Ancient microbes can wake up after being exhumed from glaciers. Closed cave ecosystems that have been self-sustaining with minimal input for thousands of years. Goddamn tardigrades in the vacuum and radiation of space.<p>Even the very air is absolutely inundated with life. Mostly with fungal spores, but we all choose to not think about that.<p>Probably the only places we won&#x27;t find life is where it&#x27;s too hot for organic molecules to exist. Even then, I wouldn&#x27;t be <i>that</i> surprised if we find some type of non-carbon self-replicating molecules in magma or something.<p>I guess that&#x27;s the beauty of evolution. If an opportunity exists, there will (eventually) be a creature evolved specifically to take advantage of it.<p>My secret dream for extraterrestrial life is something living in the gas giants. Ben Bova&#x27;s stories about vast Jovian whales really struck a chord with me.
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hughwabout 2 years ago
&quot;A decade ago, we had no idea that the rocks beneath our feet could be so vastly inhabited.&quot;<p>Over 30 years ago Thomas Gold published &quot;The Deep Hot Biosphere&quot;. A review in PNAS is here [1].<p>[1] <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.pnas.org&#x2F;doi&#x2F;10.1073&#x2F;pnas.1701266114" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.pnas.org&#x2F;doi&#x2F;10.1073&#x2F;pnas.1701266114</a>
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Scubabear68about 2 years ago
It was my privilege to know Dr. Tullis Onstott, who discovered the deepest known Nematodes miles below the surface over a decade ago. Absolutely fascinating how life finds a way to persist and survive in extreme environments.<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.m.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Tullis_Onstott" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.m.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Tullis_Onstott</a>
kuprelabout 2 years ago
Wonder if there’s a pocket of advanced life (e.g. mammals) we haven’t discovered yet
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_a_a_a_about 2 years ago
This is about subterranean bacteria, and mentions also a nematode. Fascinating it is but describing it as a Galapagos is utterly disingenuous.
Gysabout 2 years ago
For the Dutch speaking here, there is a documentary on this subject currently in the movies: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;onder-het-maaiveld.nl&#x2F;nieuws&#x2F;108-onder-het-maaiveld-toont-de-ongeziene-wereld-onder-onze-voeten" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;onder-het-maaiveld.nl&#x2F;nieuws&#x2F;108-onder-het-maaiveld-...</a>
Pokepokalypseabout 2 years ago
Pretty amazing to think that since this life evolved here, a lot of it thrives on methane. Therefore: I think there&#x27;s a high likelihood of similar life on Titan. (which has a mostly-methane atmosphere)
animal531about 2 years ago
This is probably where we need to look for life that existed (or might still do) on Mars and Venus.
baerrieabout 2 years ago
Frank Herbert spittin prophecy yet again.
justincliftabout 2 years ago
(2018)