Earthly Extremophiles Prompt Speculation about Alien Life
Discoveries of extreme life here on Earth often provoke speculation about what might lurk in other worlds. And so it was, when I that fish were found living in an isolated corner of the ocean beneath 740 meters of ice in Antarctica: People asked what this might mean for finding life on distant worlds such as Europa, a moon of Jupiter that very likely harbors an ocean of liquid water beneath a crust of ice.
Astrobiologists wax poetic about the possibility that we might someday find carpets of microbial slime clinging to the aquatic underside of Europa’s ice, but might they be setting their sights too low? Might there be something more exciting gliding through Europa’s waters, like the spidery-legged, bioluminescent xeno-arachnids envisioned in a in ? “The question will always be energy,” says Britney Schmidt, a planetary scientist at Georgia Institute of Technology who studies Europa as a possible habitat of life. “Fish require a lot of energy—a lot more than microbes.” ( is part of Nature Publishing Group.)
The same team that discovered the ocean fish in Antarctica this year also drilled into one of these subglacial lakes in January 2013: Lake Whillans, which sits under 800 meters of ice, roughly 100 kilometers inland from where the fish were discovered—both expeditions were supported by the National Science Foundation (NSF). They found that , with roughly 130,000 microbial cells per milliliter of water. But far more interesting was just how non-hostile this supposedly “extreme” subglacial environment turned out to be. At –0.5 degree Celsius, it was slightly warmer than the oceans surrounding Antarctica. And despite having sat under ice for thousands of years, it still contained levels of oxygen that some marine animals, such as brittle stars and worms, can actually survive on.
What makes this possible is that Europa seems to be geologically active, allowing these supplies of fuel and oxidants to be transported, mixed and constantly renewed. Schimdt has found evidence that warm ocean currents and convective forces beneath Europa’s frozen shell , bringing vast pockets of water, sometimes holding as much liquid as all of the Great Lakes combined, to within several kilometers of the moon’s icy surface.
Scientists analyzing the cracks and ridges on Europa’s surface find that its icy skin is also slowly , with one icy plate slipping and buckling under the edge of another. The plate sinks and eventually melts back into the ocean below, carrying with it the oxidative chemicals that were formed on the surface.
Schmidt is part of a team of scientists in the early stages of developing a NASA mission, called , which will investigate these questions by placing a reconnaissance spacecraft in orbit around Jupiter. Clipper will periodically swoop down to as low as 25 to 100 kilometers above Europa’s surface. It will use ice-penetrating radar to measure the thickness of the moon’s ice shell, map its internal rifts and faults (clues to the tempo of its geologic activity) and locate pockets of water near the surface. An onboard magnetometer will measure the depth and saltiness of the ocean and a spectrometer will measure chemicals in Europa’s uppermost layers of ice. Clipper would take a few years to build and launch, assuming it gets funded.
Chomsky: We Are All – Fill in the Blank.
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