Evidence of life beneath the Earth could transform the search for oil
Right now, in the hot, dark hell thousands of metres below your feet, there’s a sprawling Lost World teeming with life. It has been there for countless millions of years, yet its very existence has long been dismissed as a scientific impossibility.
No longer. Last
week, a leading team of researchers announced there is now “overwhelming
evidence” for vast colonies of life-forms deep underground, and called for a
global project to find out more about them.
Once dismissed
as the fantasy of one maverick researcher, the reality of the so-called Deep
Hot Biosphere has profound implications for the existence of life.
And it could
revolutionise transform the search for new reserves of gas and oil.
All this seemed
unthinkable twenty five years ago this month when Thomas Gold, a controversial
scientist at Cornell University, New York, went public with his “crazy” idea
that life could exist deep in the rocks of the Earth’s crust.
Back then,
biology textbooks insisted that ultimately every organism needs access to
sunlight. Everything from plants and plankton to humans gets the energy it
needs either directly or otherwise from photosynthesis, which turns light
energy into the chemical energy needed by cells.
But in a 1992
research paper in the prestigious Proceedings of the US National Academy of
Sciences, Gold challenged this view by arguing that microbes could exist in the
cracks and pores of rock far below the Earth’s surface.
In these sunless
depths, they would need a radically different source of energy to survive. Gold
claimed it could come from oil and other hydrocarbons in the rocks around them.
For the rest of
his life, Gold would struggle to convince others to take his idea seriously.
Some geologists were so outraged by this “outsider” and his wild theory that
they petitioned the US government to have references to it expunged from the
nation’s libraries.
But Gold was no
stranger to controversy, and had a reputation for radical scientific ideas.
During the 1940s
he had been part of a team of astronomers who rejected the idea of the universe
beginning with a Big Bang. They argued it had always existed, with matter being
constantly created by a special energy field.
Bitterly
attacked by some astronomers, this so-called Steady State model was later
disproved by the discovery of the heat left over from the Big Bang.
Gold had more
success with equally daring ideas in fields ranging from auditory science to
the study of the Moon.
By the 1980s
Gold had turned his attention to the Earth, and decided to challenge the
standard account of the origin of hydrocarbons like gas and oil.
As every
schoolchild knows, these are the result of decaying vegetation and organisms
being chemically transformed by pressure and heat over millions of years as
they become crushed by overlying layers.
But Gold pointed
out that hydrocarbons had also been found on other planets devoid of life –
suggesting that they may have been present inside the Earth when it was formed
4.5 billion years ago.
The idea that
oil, gas and other hydrocarbons might have a non-biological origin was not new.
In the 1860s, the French chemist Marcellin Berthelot showed that “organic”
compounds could be made using lab equipment.
Gold went
further, however, claiming that the hydrocarbons trapped within the Earth were
the energy source for vast colonies of bacteria lurking kilometres below the
surface.
To back his
claim, Gold pointed to reports of living microbes being found in oil samples
taken at huge depths.
Critics
dismissed this as nothing more than contamination, prompting Gold to put his
theory to the test. In the mid-1980s he persuaded the Swedish state energy
board to drill for oil where conventional theory said none could exist, and
showing it contained live bacteria.
Drilling down
over 6km into solid granite in central Sweden, engineers found tonnes of a
light petroleum liquid, along with entirely new forms of bacteria.
Sceptics
remained unconvinced, and by the time of his death in 2004, it seemed that
Gold’s idea of a global subterranean biosphere had died with him.
Yet a major
review of the evidence published last week in the Proceedings of the NAS tells
a different story. Coinciding with the 25th anniversary of Gold’s original
paper to the journal, it shows how scepticism about Gold’s claims is turning
into increasing acceptance.
According to a
team led by Prof Daniel Colman of Montana State University, Gold’s theory has
inspired a new generation of researchers, leading to a host of discoveries
about bacteria and the Earth.
It is now known
that bacteria do exist at huge depths. In 2006 scientists at Princeton
discovered an entire colony of bacteria more than 3,000 metres underground in a
South African gold mine.
A few years
later, more were found 1.4 km beneath the sea floor in the North Atlantic – and
they were using hydrocarbons as a source of energy, exactly as Gold predicted.
Many bacteria
are now known to be able to cope with the heat deep within the Earth. Some
so-called thermophilic (“heat-loving”) microbes thrive at a scalding hot 122°C.
Almost a third of known types of bacteria are also known to have the ability to
process hydrogen – which makes little sense for organisms inhabiting the
Earth’s surface.
Quite how far
down the Deep Hot Biosphere goes is still anyone’s guess. In October 2014
researchers from Yale University found signs of bacterial activity in rocks
over 19km below the San Juan Islands near Seattle.
Prof Colman and
his colleagues are now calling for a major research programme to explore the
mysterious world beneath our feet. They want to see scientists working with oil
and gas industry engineers to dig deeper.
The findings are
likely to cast new light on the origin of life not only on Earth but on the
planets and beyond.
But they may
also have more down-to-Earth matters. Last week the UK Engineering and Physical
Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) announced a new project to use bacteria in
the search for new oil reserves.
The idea is to
map the distribution of thermophilic bacteria which might seep from sub-sea oil
fields. Trials are currently under way off Canada’s Atlantic coast.
The most
important legacy of Gold’s daring hypothesis has much wider implications
however: that in choosing a theory, there is – as he put it himself shortly
before his death – “no virtue in being timid”.
Reproduced from:
https://www.thenational.ae/uae/evidence-of-life-beneath-the-earth-could-transform-the-search-for-oil-1.431518
Author Robert Matthews
is Visiting Professor of Science at Aston University, Birmingham, UK
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