Activity measurements of methanogenic Archaea isolated from Siberian Permafrost under simulated Mars analog conditions

The environmental conditions of early Mars and early Earth are assumed to have been most similar. The oldest proofs of life on Earth, which can be found as microfossils in Archaean rocks, date back to this time of about 3.8 Ga ago. Regarding this one can presume that life might have evolved on Mars,...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Malaszkiewicz, Janosch, Wagner, Dirk
Format: Conference Object
Language:unknown
Published: 2010
Subjects:
Ice
Online Access:https://epic.awi.de/id/eprint/23170/
https://hdl.handle.net/10013/epic.35943
id ftawi:oai:epic.awi.de:23170
record_format openpolar
spelling ftawi:oai:epic.awi.de:23170 2024-09-15T18:11:35+00:00 Activity measurements of methanogenic Archaea isolated from Siberian Permafrost under simulated Mars analog conditions Malaszkiewicz, Janosch Wagner, Dirk 2010 https://epic.awi.de/id/eprint/23170/ https://hdl.handle.net/10013/epic.35943 unknown Malaszkiewicz, J. and Wagner, D. (2010) Activity measurements of methanogenic Archaea isolated from Siberian Permafrost under simulated Mars analog conditions , 24th International Polar Meeting of German Society of Polar Research Obergurgl/Austria, September 6 10 . hdl:10013/epic.35943 EPIC324th International Polar Meeting of German Society of Polar Research Obergurgl/Austria, September 6 10, 2010 p. Conference notRev 2010 ftawi 2024-06-24T04:02:26Z The environmental conditions of early Mars and early Earth are assumed to have been most similar. The oldest proofs of life on Earth, which can be found as microfossils in Archaean rocks, date back to this time of about 3.8 Ga ago. Regarding this one can presume that life might have evolved on Mars, too. Martian life must have adapted to the drastic change of conditions on the planet or become extinct. Plausible forms of still existing prokaryotic life on Mars are lithoautothrophic subsurface ecosystems. Comparable environments exist in the permafrost regions on Earth.On Mars frozen water in form of surface glaciers and subsurface ground ice layers but also water in a liquid state - which is one of the most important factors for the existence of life - could be observed by NASA and ESA missions. The detection of methane on Mars by Mars Express lead to the conclusion that it must be of a recent origin because of its rather short persistence time in the atmosphere of a few hundreds of years. Thinkable sources of the methane are active volcanism - that could not yet be observed on modern Mars - or biogenic production. The correlation between the presence of water vapour and methane on the Martian surface which occur both in higher concentrations in the same regions and time intervals are an indication of a biological source of the methane on Mars. Methanogenic archaea from terrestrial permafrost regions are therefore one of the most suitable candidates for possible existing life on Mars. They have evolved under early Earth conditions, grow lithoautotorphicly under strictly anaerobic surroundings, are able to tolerate low temperatures and have survived in the extreme environments of permafrost affected soils for several millions of years.This PhD project is associated to the Helmholtz-Alliance Planetary Evolution and Life and is focused on experiments with strains of methanogenic archaea that have been isolated from the active layer of permafrost on Samoylov Island in the Lena Delta, Siberia. Former experiments with ... Conference Object Ice lena delta permafrost Polar Research Siberia Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar- and Marine Research (AWI): ePIC (electronic Publication Information Center)
institution Open Polar
collection Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar- and Marine Research (AWI): ePIC (electronic Publication Information Center)
op_collection_id ftawi
language unknown
description The environmental conditions of early Mars and early Earth are assumed to have been most similar. The oldest proofs of life on Earth, which can be found as microfossils in Archaean rocks, date back to this time of about 3.8 Ga ago. Regarding this one can presume that life might have evolved on Mars, too. Martian life must have adapted to the drastic change of conditions on the planet or become extinct. Plausible forms of still existing prokaryotic life on Mars are lithoautothrophic subsurface ecosystems. Comparable environments exist in the permafrost regions on Earth.On Mars frozen water in form of surface glaciers and subsurface ground ice layers but also water in a liquid state - which is one of the most important factors for the existence of life - could be observed by NASA and ESA missions. The detection of methane on Mars by Mars Express lead to the conclusion that it must be of a recent origin because of its rather short persistence time in the atmosphere of a few hundreds of years. Thinkable sources of the methane are active volcanism - that could not yet be observed on modern Mars - or biogenic production. The correlation between the presence of water vapour and methane on the Martian surface which occur both in higher concentrations in the same regions and time intervals are an indication of a biological source of the methane on Mars. Methanogenic archaea from terrestrial permafrost regions are therefore one of the most suitable candidates for possible existing life on Mars. They have evolved under early Earth conditions, grow lithoautotorphicly under strictly anaerobic surroundings, are able to tolerate low temperatures and have survived in the extreme environments of permafrost affected soils for several millions of years.This PhD project is associated to the Helmholtz-Alliance Planetary Evolution and Life and is focused on experiments with strains of methanogenic archaea that have been isolated from the active layer of permafrost on Samoylov Island in the Lena Delta, Siberia. Former experiments with ...
format Conference Object
author Malaszkiewicz, Janosch
Wagner, Dirk
spellingShingle Malaszkiewicz, Janosch
Wagner, Dirk
Activity measurements of methanogenic Archaea isolated from Siberian Permafrost under simulated Mars analog conditions
author_facet Malaszkiewicz, Janosch
Wagner, Dirk
author_sort Malaszkiewicz, Janosch
title Activity measurements of methanogenic Archaea isolated from Siberian Permafrost under simulated Mars analog conditions
title_short Activity measurements of methanogenic Archaea isolated from Siberian Permafrost under simulated Mars analog conditions
title_full Activity measurements of methanogenic Archaea isolated from Siberian Permafrost under simulated Mars analog conditions
title_fullStr Activity measurements of methanogenic Archaea isolated from Siberian Permafrost under simulated Mars analog conditions
title_full_unstemmed Activity measurements of methanogenic Archaea isolated from Siberian Permafrost under simulated Mars analog conditions
title_sort activity measurements of methanogenic archaea isolated from siberian permafrost under simulated mars analog conditions
publishDate 2010
url https://epic.awi.de/id/eprint/23170/
https://hdl.handle.net/10013/epic.35943
genre Ice
lena delta
permafrost
Polar Research
Siberia
genre_facet Ice
lena delta
permafrost
Polar Research
Siberia
op_source EPIC324th International Polar Meeting of German Society of Polar Research Obergurgl/Austria, September 6 10, 2010 p.
op_relation Malaszkiewicz, J. and Wagner, D. (2010) Activity measurements of methanogenic Archaea isolated from Siberian Permafrost under simulated Mars analog conditions , 24th International Polar Meeting of German Society of Polar Research Obergurgl/Austria, September 6 10 . hdl:10013/epic.35943
_version_ 1810449172728381440