Physical, chemical and biological processes in Lake Vostok and other Antarctic subglacial lakes

Over 70 lakes have now been identified beneath the Antarctic ice sheet. Although water from none of the lakes has been sampled directly, analysis of lake ice frozen (accreted) to the underside of the ice sheet above Lake Vostok, the largest of these lakes, has allowed inferences to be made on lake w...

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Main Authors: Siegert M., Ellis-Evans J., Tranter M., Mayer C., Petit J., Salamatin A., Priscu J.
Format: Review
Language:unknown
Published: 2001
Subjects:
Online Access:https://openrepository.ru/article?id=172378
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spelling ftneicon:oai:rour.neicon.ru:rour/172378 2023-05-15T14:00:43+02:00 Physical, chemical and biological processes in Lake Vostok and other Antarctic subglacial lakes Siegert M. Ellis-Evans J. Tranter M. Mayer C. Petit J. Salamatin A. Priscu J. 2001 https://openrepository.ru/article?id=172378 unknown Nature 6864 414 603 http://rour.neicon.ru:80/xmlui/bitstream/rour/172378/1/nora.pdf 0028-0836 https://openrepository.ru/article?id=172378 SCOPUS00280836-2001-414-6864-SID0035818966 Review 2001 ftneicon 2020-07-21T11:58:45Z Over 70 lakes have now been identified beneath the Antarctic ice sheet. Although water from none of the lakes has been sampled directly, analysis of lake ice frozen (accreted) to the underside of the ice sheet above Lake Vostok, the largest of these lakes, has allowed inferences to be made on lake water chemistry and has revealed small quantities of microbes. These findings suggest that Lake Vostok is an extreme, yet viable, environment for life. All subglacial lakes are subject to high pressure (∼350 atmospheres), low temperatures (about -3 °C) and permanent darkness. Any microbes present must therefore use chemical sources to power biological processes. Importantly, dissolved oxygen is available at least at the lake surface, from equilibration with air hydrates released from melting basal glacier ice. Microbes found in Lake Vostok's accreted ice are relatively modern, but the probability of ancient lake-floor sediments leads to a possibility of a very old biota at the base of subglacial lakes. Review Antarc* Antarctic Ice Sheet NORA (National aggregator of open repositories of Russian universities) Antarctic Lake Vostok ENVELOPE(106.000,106.000,-77.500,-77.500) The Antarctic
institution Open Polar
collection NORA (National aggregator of open repositories of Russian universities)
op_collection_id ftneicon
language unknown
description Over 70 lakes have now been identified beneath the Antarctic ice sheet. Although water from none of the lakes has been sampled directly, analysis of lake ice frozen (accreted) to the underside of the ice sheet above Lake Vostok, the largest of these lakes, has allowed inferences to be made on lake water chemistry and has revealed small quantities of microbes. These findings suggest that Lake Vostok is an extreme, yet viable, environment for life. All subglacial lakes are subject to high pressure (∼350 atmospheres), low temperatures (about -3 °C) and permanent darkness. Any microbes present must therefore use chemical sources to power biological processes. Importantly, dissolved oxygen is available at least at the lake surface, from equilibration with air hydrates released from melting basal glacier ice. Microbes found in Lake Vostok's accreted ice are relatively modern, but the probability of ancient lake-floor sediments leads to a possibility of a very old biota at the base of subglacial lakes.
format Review
author Siegert M.
Ellis-Evans J.
Tranter M.
Mayer C.
Petit J.
Salamatin A.
Priscu J.
spellingShingle Siegert M.
Ellis-Evans J.
Tranter M.
Mayer C.
Petit J.
Salamatin A.
Priscu J.
Physical, chemical and biological processes in Lake Vostok and other Antarctic subglacial lakes
author_facet Siegert M.
Ellis-Evans J.
Tranter M.
Mayer C.
Petit J.
Salamatin A.
Priscu J.
author_sort Siegert M.
title Physical, chemical and biological processes in Lake Vostok and other Antarctic subglacial lakes
title_short Physical, chemical and biological processes in Lake Vostok and other Antarctic subglacial lakes
title_full Physical, chemical and biological processes in Lake Vostok and other Antarctic subglacial lakes
title_fullStr Physical, chemical and biological processes in Lake Vostok and other Antarctic subglacial lakes
title_full_unstemmed Physical, chemical and biological processes in Lake Vostok and other Antarctic subglacial lakes
title_sort physical, chemical and biological processes in lake vostok and other antarctic subglacial lakes
publishDate 2001
url https://openrepository.ru/article?id=172378
long_lat ENVELOPE(106.000,106.000,-77.500,-77.500)
geographic Antarctic
Lake Vostok
The Antarctic
geographic_facet Antarctic
Lake Vostok
The Antarctic
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Ice Sheet
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Ice Sheet
op_source SCOPUS00280836-2001-414-6864-SID0035818966
op_relation Nature
6864
414
603
http://rour.neicon.ru:80/xmlui/bitstream/rour/172378/1/nora.pdf
0028-0836
https://openrepository.ru/article?id=172378
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