• 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

Scientists “Wake Up” Ancient Life That’s Been Under The Seabed For 100 Million Years

August 28, 2025 by Deborah Bloomfield

Deep below the seafloor, locked in a layer of 100-million-year-old sediment, a lifeform quietly lives. It’s not quite Godzilla, nor a long-lost Megalodon, but it does go to show how life on Earth can dwell under the most extreme and bizarre circumstances.

Scientists discovered that communities of microbes living beneath the seafloor are able to survive in rock sediments for over 100 million years with desperately little nutrients. After being coaxed under the right conditions in a lab, the ancient microbes are even able to snap out of their “hibernation” to metabolize and multiply once again.

Reported in the journal Nature Communications back in July 2020, researchers from Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology (JAMSTEC) and the University of Rhode Island got their hands on these microbes by gathering sediment samples from 75 meters (246 feet) below the seafloor in the South Pacific Ocean, nearly 5,700 meters (18,700 feet) below sea level. 

The microbial life was capable of being revived through finely tuned techniques in a laboratory. Incubated with isotope-labeled carbon and nitrogen-laced nutrients, within 10 weeks the isotopes showed up in the microbes, demonstrating they were in a metabolically active state, even capable of feeding and dividing.

“These are the oldest microbes revived from a marine environment,” Steven D’Hondt, study author and Professor of Oceanography at the University of Rhode Island, told IFLScience in 2020.

“Even after 100 million years of starvation, some microbes can grow, reproduce, and engage in a wide variety of metabolic activities when they’re returned to the surface world,” he added.

The microbe communities became trapped beneath the seafloor long ago after being buried by layers of sediment made up of “marine snow,” debris, dust, and other particles. This layer of sediment from the study was deposited over a period from 13 to 101.5 million years ago. 

If the sediment is formed under the right circumstances, oxygen is still just about able to penetrate to these depths, but little else can migrate, suggesting the microbial communities have stayed put for all these years. While the layer does contain oxygen, it has very limited amounts of organic material, such as carbon, and is an unbelievably harsh environment for life. 

In the incubated lab conditions, some of the microbes responded rapidly, increasing in number by more than four orders of magnitude over the 68 days of incubation. Even in the oldest 101.5-million-year-old sediment, they observed the microbes uptaking the isotopes and increasing in cell numbers.

A stretch of the Pacific Ocean where the researchers gathered their samples.

A stretch of the Pacific Ocean where the researchers gathered their samples.

Image courtesy of IODP/JRSO

Most of the microbes appear to be aerobic bacteria, meaning they are microbes that need oxygen to survive and grow. Given the scarcity of nutrients that far down, it’s likely these microbes have slowed down their “body clocks” to live an extremely sluggish life, complete with a slow metabolism and very slow evolutionary speed. 

“We believe the community has remained there for 100 million years, with an unknown number of generations. Since the calculated energy flux for subseafloor sedimentary microbes is barely sufficient for molecular repair, the number of generations could be inconceivably low,” Professor D’Hondt explained to IFLScience.

It was once assumed that life could only survive just a few meters beneath the seabed, namely near continental edges where lots of organic matter can be found. However, as this study affirms, researchers are now showing that life beneath the seafloor is much more diverse and fascinating than previously realized. In a separate study published in March 2020, scientists even discovered microbial communities living some 750 meters (2,500 feet) beneath the seabed.

An earlier version of this article was published in July 2020.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. New York’s fatal floods stoke calls for U.S. infrastructure spending
  2. Gamitee becomes Joyned as it secures $4M for social shopping platform
  3. At Least 123 Members Of US Congress Are Climate Change Deniers
  4. Graffiti Of Scorpions And Bagels Discovered At Site Of Jesus’s Last Supper

Source Link: Scientists "Wake Up" Ancient Life That's Been Under The Seabed For 100 Million Years

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • Rare Flat-Headed Cat Rediscovered In Thailand Following First Confirmed Sighting In Almost 30 Years
  • Don’t Pour Oil Down The Drain, There’s A Very Clever Way To Get Rid Of It
  • People Around The World Are Drinking Less Alcohol
  • Is It Better To Have One Long Walk Or Many Short Ones?
  • Where Is The World’s Largest Christmas Tree?
  • In A Monumental Scientific Effort, The Human Genome Has Been Mapped Across Time And Space In Four Dimensions
  • Can This Electronic Nose “Smell” Indoor Mould?
  • Why Does The Earth’s Closest Approach To The Sun Take Place During Winter?
  • 2025 Was The Year Humanity Got Closer Than Ever To Finding Alien Life
  • Kilauea Has Officially Been Erupting For A Year – You Can Watch Its Latest Spectacular Lava Fountains Live
  • Meet The Ladybird Spider, A “Red-Colored Oddball” With Features Never Seen Before
  • Breakthrough Listen Searched Interstellar Object 3I/ATLAS For Technosignatures During Its Closest Approach To Earth
  • “Miracle” Rhinoceros Calf’s Chonky Weight Gain Offers Hope For Species
  • Would You Swap Your Festive Feast For Something Plant-Based Or Lab-Grown?
  • Rodents In The US Are Rapidly Evolving Right “Under Your Nose”
  • 39-Year-Old Discovers Raisins Don’t Come From A Raisin Tree, Gets Mercilessly Roasted By Family And The Internet
  • Hundreds Of 19th-Century Black Leather Shoes Have Mysteriously Washed Up On A Beach
  • What’s Behind The “Florida Skunk Ape” Sightings? A Black Bear, Or Something Else?
  • Hubble Telescope’s Bite Of Dracula’s Chivito Reveals Chaos In The Largest Known Planet-Forming Disk
  • All Animals, Plants, And Fungi On Earth Can Be Traced Back To A Common Ancestor: The “Asgardians”
  • 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