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The Deep Biosphere

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Title: The Deep Biosphere


1
The Deep Biosphere
Tom Kieft New Mexico Tech
DOSECC Conference on The Future of Continental
Scientific Drilling A U.S. Perspective
2
Why study subsurface microbes?
  • The majority of prokaryotic biomass appears to be
    in the subsurface (Whitman et al., 1998)
  • Reveal unknown metabolic capabilities and
    ecosystems
  • Applications of novel microbes
  • Bioremediation of contaminated aquifers
  • Understanding waste repositories
  • Analogs for life on other planets?
  • C sequestration

3
Whos there?
microorganisms
macroorganisms
4
How do they make a living?
Microbes couple oxidation of fuels (electron
donors) with reduction of oxidants (electron
acceptors). Subsurface Fuels Microbes near the
surface depend on photosynthetically generated
organic carbon. The deep biosphere may depend on
geochemically derived energy sources H2, CH4,
etc.
or lt 20 kJ/mole
5
What are the rates of activity?
Life in the slow lane!
6
The Deep Terrestrial Biosphere 25 years of
research
  • Funding DOE, NSF, NASA Astrobiology, others
  • Major Accomplishments
  • Drilling and tracer technologies
  • Extended known biosphere to gt4 km
  • Revealed high biomass biodiversity
  • Isolates in culture collections
  • Linked microbial activity with geological
    interfaces
  • Slow rates of subsurface microbial activity
  • Discovery of subsurface lithoautotrophic
    microbial ecosystems (SLiMEs)

7
EarthLab
8
Shallow aquifers
tens of km
Terminal electron-accepting processes along a
flow-path. From Smith and Harris, 2007
9
The Witwatersrand Deep Microbiology
Project Witwatersrand Basin, South Africa
Evander
3.0 Ga basement 2.0 Ga meteorite impact Uplift 2
km at 90 myr
10
2.0 Ga
2.0 Ga
300 Ma
121oC
2.9 Ga
2.3 Ga
2.7 Ga
Basement 3.4 Ga
Thermal gradients
25oC/km
9-15oC/km
20oC/km
11
Desulforudis audaxviator Ubiquitous in 3-km deep
groundwater Sulfate-reducer Novel
taxon Uncultured Genome has now been sequenced
12
H2O
FeS2
Radiolysis
Geochemical Reactions
4H2 H SO42- -----gt HS- 4H2O
O2, H2O2
H2
SRB
Desulforudis audaxviator
13
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14
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15
Flowing borehole sampling March 2006 Henderson
Mine, CO
Packer inserted in borehole
Filtering cells
16
Henderson Mine, Colorado -- new bacterial
division dominates
Sahl et al., 2008
17
Deep drilling into the Chesapeake Bay Impact
Structure
from Charles Cockell
18
NELSAM (Natural Earthquake Laboratory in a South
African Mine)
DAFBIO instrumented borehole
Seismic events release H2
from T.C. Onstott, Princeton Univ.
19
Microbial diversity declines with depth
Chinese Continental Scientific Drilling (CCSD)
project
No. of Taxa
5 km!
Depth (m)
from Hailiang Dong, Miami Univ.
20
Opportunities to probe the deep biosphere via
continental drilling
  • Select sites that can address one or more of the
    big scientific questions, e.g.,
  • Mineralogy with potential for H2 generation
  • Sites with high geothermal gradients to allow
    penetration of the 121C isotherm
  • Drilling/coring in deep mines, e.g.,
    DUSEL-Homestake
  • Plan up front for geobiological studies in
    drilling projects

21
Deep Biosphere Major Research Questions (from
NSF Deep Science)
  • How deeply does life extend into the Earth?
  • What fuels the deep biosphere?
  • How does the interplay between biology and
    geology shape the subsurface?
  • What are subsurface genomes telling us?
  • Did life on the earth's surface come from
    underground?
  • Is there life as we don't know it?

22
1. How deeply does life extend into the Earth?
  • What are the factors that control distribution of
    life in the deep subsurface?
  • Temperature?
  • 121C current known upper limit.
  • Geothermal gradient 10-60C/km, average
    20C/km.
  • Temperature-limited biosphere may extend 2-12 km
    below land surface
  • Pressure?
  • Energy and nutrient availability?
  • Pore space?
  • A combination of these factors?

23
2. What fuels the deep subsurface?
  • Buried organic C
  • Transported organic C
  • Abiogenic chemical energy sources H2, CH4,
    ethane, propane, etc.

24
Rock-Water Interactions that Generate Geogas
(H2), etc.
  • Basalt-water interactions, e.g., in Snake River
    Plain basalt aquifers (Stevens and McKinley,
    1995 Chapelle et al., 2002)
  • Serpentinization, e.g., at the Lost City vent
    (Kelley et al., 2005)
  • Granite-water interactions, Aspo Hard Rock Lab,
    Sweden (Pedersen, 1997)
  • Radiolysis of water, e.g., in the Witwatersrand
    Basin, South Africa (Lin et al., 2005, 2006).

25
IODP as a model for integrating geobiology into
scientific drilling
  • First cores for microbiology (mid-1980s)
  • Deep Biosphere designated as one of three major
    themes (2003)
  • Acquisition of bio sample handling and tracer
    technologies
  • so far one cruise with Deep Biosphere as the
    major theme
  • 3 more in the queue
  • other cruises have included microbiology
  • papers in high-profile journals Science and
    Nature
  • increased funding, buy-in from multiple NSF
    programs

26
Examples of NSF programs with potential to fund
subsurface geobiology
  • Geosciences (GEO) - EAR
  • Geobiology and Low-temperature Geochemistry
  • Emerging Topics in Biogeochemical Cycles
  • Biological Sciences (BIO)
  • Life in Transition
  • Microbial Systems in the Biosphere
  • Possible new GEO-BIO node
  • Other agencies, too e.g., DOE, NASA

27
Technical requirements for geomicrobiological
sampling
  • tracers
  • Solute Br-, fluorochromes (e.g., rhodamine),
    perfluorinated hydrocarbons
  • Particulate fluorescent carboxylated 1-µm
    microbeads
  • core diameters gt2 inches preferred
  • drilling methods are highly site specific.
  • anaerobic glove bag
  • core barrels should be steam cleaned, core barrel
    liners
  • freezer onsite

28
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29
Drilling plans at DUSEL - Homestake
Integrated geohydrology, geophysics,
geomicrobiology
30
0 m 7.5C
Geothermal gradient 22.3 C/km
2440 m 62C
4880 m 116C 16,000
31
Drilling to great depth is cheaper if you start
in a deep mine
Drilling in Henderson Mine, CO
Drilling costs
32
Recommendations
  • Include the deep biosphere as a major scientific
    theme for deep continental drilling.
  • Look for opportunities to integrate geomicro
    studies into each drilling project
  • Add tracers and geomicrobiological handling as
    part of deep drilling tool kit.
  • Use interdisciplinar deep geomicrobiological
    research as means of broadening the funding base
    for continental scientific drilling.
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