Results have implications for life on Mars (not to mention Tokyo)
That seabed radiation also gave us Godzilla |
The
team discovered that the creation of these chemicals is amplified significantly
by minerals in marine sediment. In contrast to the conventional view that life
in sediment is fueled by products of photosynthesis, an ecosystem fueled by irradiation
of water begins just meters below the seafloor in much of the open ocean. This
radiation-fueled world is one of Earth’s volumetrically largest ecosystems.
The
research was published today in the journal Nature
Communications.
“This work provides an important new perspective on the availability of resources that subsurface microbial communities can use to sustain themselves. This is fundamental to understand life on Earth and to constrain the habitability of other planetary bodies, such as Mars,” said Justine Sauvage, the study’s lead author and a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Gothenburg who conducted the research as a doctoral student at URI.
The
process driving the research team’s findings is radiolysis of water – the
splitting of water molecules into hydrogen and oxidants as a result of being
exposed to naturally occurring radiation. Steven D’Hondt, URI professor of
oceanography and a co-author of the study, said the resulting molecules become
the primary source of food and energy for the microbes living in the sediment.
“The
marine sediment actually amplifies the production of these usable chemicals,”
he said. “If you have the same amount of irradiation in pure water and in wet
sediment, you get a lot more hydrogen from wet sediment. The sediment makes the
production of hydrogen much more effective.”
Why
the process is amplified in wet sediment is unclear, but D’Hondt speculates
that minerals in the sediment may “behave like a semiconductor, making the
process more efficient.”
The
discoveries resulted from a series of laboratory experiments conducted in the
Rhode Island Nuclear Science Center. Sauvage irradiated vials of wet sediment
from various locations in the Pacific and Atlantic Oceans, collected by the
Integrated Ocean Drilling Program and by U.S. research vessels. She compared
the production of hydrogen to similarly irradiated vials of seawater and
distilled water. The sediment amplified the results by as much as a factor of
30.
“This
study is a unique combination of sophisticated laboratory experiments
integrated into a global biological context,” said co-author Arthur Spivack,
URI professor of oceanography.
The
implications of the findings are significant.
“If you can support life in subsurface marine sediment and other subsurface environments from natural radioactive splitting of water, then maybe you can support life the same way in other worlds,” said D’Hondt.
“Some of the same
minerals are present on Mars, and as long as you have those wet catalytic
minerals, you’re going to have this process. If you can catalyze production of
radiolytic chemicals at high rates in the wet Martian subsurface, you could
potentially sustain life at the same levels that it’s sustained in marine
sediment.”
Sauvage
added, “This is especially relevant given that the Perseverance Rover has just
landed on Mars, with its mission to collect Martian rocks and to characterize
its habitable environments.”
D’Hondt
said the research team’s findings also have implications for the nuclear
industry, including for how nuclear waste is stored and how nuclear accidents
are managed. “If you store nuclear waste in sediment or rock, it may generate
hydrogen and oxidants faster than in pure water. That natural catalysis may
make those storage systems more corrosive than is generally realized,” he said.
The
next steps for the research team will be to explore the effect of hydrogen
production through radiolysis in other environments on Earth and beyond,
including oceanic crust, continental crust and subsurface Mars. They also will
seek to advance the understanding of how subsurface microbial communities live,
interact and evolve when their primary energy source is derived from the
natural radiolytic splitting of water.
This
study was supported by the U.S. National Science Foundation and the U.S.
National Aeronautics and Space Administration. The project is also affiliated
with the Center for Dark Energy Biosphere Investigations.