• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Deep Within A Gold Mine, A Wealth Of “Microbial Dark Matter” Is Unearthed

November 30, 2023 by Deborah Bloomfield

To illuminate the “microbial dark matter” that lives deep within Earth, scientists took a journey deep within a gold mine and returned with samples detailing hundreds of different microbial species. This, however, is just a drop in the ocean of all the life that lives beneath our feet.

The amount of microbial life below our planet’s surface is immense. If scooped up and placed on a giant scale, the microbes living deep within Earth’s crust would outweigh all of the biomass from the world’s oceans. Despite this ubiquity, scientists know very little about them. 

Advertisement

To get a glimpse of this subterranean world, scientists at Northwestern University studied samples taken from the Deep Mine Microbial Observatory, a former gold mine in the Black Hills, South Dakota.

“The deep subsurface biosphere is enormous; it’s just a vast amount of space,” Magdalena Osburn, lead study author and an associate professor of Earth and planetary science at Northwestern’s Weinberg College of Arts and Sciences, said in a statement. 

“We used the mine as a conduit to access that biosphere, which is difficult to reach no matter how you approach it. The power of our study is that we ended up with a lot of genomes, and many from understudied groups. From that DNA, we can understand which organisms live underground and learn what they could be doing. These are organisms that we often can’t grow in the lab or study in more traditional contexts. They are often called ‘microbial dark matter’ because we know so little about them,” Osburn added.

Exterior view of the former goldmine in the Black Hills, South Dakota.

Exterior view of the former goldmine in the Black Hills, South Dakota.

Image credit: Sanford Underground Research Facility

The team sequenced the microbial DNA held within the samples and identified nearly 600 genomes from 50 distinct phyla and 18 candidate phyla. 

Advertisement

Within this diverse collection, it appeared that almost all of the microbes fell into one of two roles: “minimalists” that have limited but specialized jobs, or “maximalists” that will readily utilize any resource they come across. 

“Man[y] of the microbes we found were either minimalists: ultra-streamlined with one job that it does very well alongside a close consortium of collaborators, or it can do a little bit of everything,” Osburn said. “These maximalists are ready for every resource that comes along. If there is an opportunity to make some energy or transform a biomolecule, it is prepared. By looking at its genome, we can tell it has many options. If nutrients are scarce, it can just make its own.”

This research may even hold some implications for the search for extraterrestrial life. When looking for signs of life elsewhere in the solar system, we tend to focus on water or evidence on the surface. These kinds of discoveries, however, are a reminder that life is also perfectly capable of living below a moon or planet’s surface.

“I get really excited when I see evidence of microbial life, doing its thing without us, without plants, without oxygen, without surface atmosphere. These kinds of life very well could exist deep within Mars or in the oceans of icy moons right now. The forms of life tell us about what might live elsewhere in the solar system,” added Osburn.

Advertisement

The study has been accepted by the journal Environmental Microbiology. You can read an early version of the manuscript right here.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Paris ramps up security as jihadist attacks trial starts
  2. Cricket-‘Western bloc’ has let Pakistan down, board chief says
  3. Ancient Bison Found In Permafrost Is So Well Preserved Scientists Want To Clone It
  4. Where Inside Us Do We Feel Love?

Source Link: Deep Within A Gold Mine, A Wealth Of "Microbial Dark Matter" Is Unearthed

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • This Brilliant Map Has 3D Models Of Nearly Every Single Building In The World – All 2.75 Billion Of Them
  • These Hognose Snakes Have The Most Dramatic Defense Technique You’ve Ever Seen
  • Titan, Saturn’s Biggest Moon, Might Not Have A Secret Ocean After All
  • The World’s Oldest Individual Animal Was Born In 1499 CE. In 2006, Humans Accidentally Killed It.
  • What Is Glaze Ice? The Strange (And Deadly) Frozen Phenomenon That Locks Plants Inside Icicles
  • Has Anyone Ever Actually Been Swallowed By A Whale?
  • First-Known Instance Of Bees Laying Eggs In Fossilized Tooth Sockets Discovered In 20,000-Year-Old Bones
  • Polar Bear Mom Adopts Cub – Only The 13th Known Case Of Adoption In 45 Years Of Study At Hudson Bay
  • The Longest-Running Evolution Experiment Has Been Going For 80,000 Generations
  • From Shrink Rays And Simulated Universes To Medical Mishaps And More: The Stories That Made The Vault In 2025
  • Fastest Cretaceous Theropod Yet Discovered In 120-Million-Year-Old Dinosaur Trackway
  • What’s The Moon Made Of?
  • First Hubble View Of The Crab Nebula In 24 Years Is A Thing Of Beauty… With Mysterious “Knots”
  • “Orbital House Of Cards”: One Solar Storm And 2.8 Days Could End In Disaster For Earth And Its Satellites
  • Astronomical Winter Vs. Meteorological Winter: What’s The Difference?
  • Do Any Animal Species Actively Hunt Humans As Prey?
  • “What The Heck Is This?”: JWST Reveals Bizarre Exoplanet With Inexplicable Composition
  • The Animal With The Strongest Bite Chomps Down With A Force Of Over 16,000 Newtons
  • The Eschatian Hypothesis: Why Our First Contact From Aliens May Be Particularly Bleak, And Nothing Like The Movies
  • The Great Mountain Meltdown Is Coming: We Could Reach “Peak Glacier Extinction” By 2041
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version