archive-1: Re: SETI [ASTRO] Astronomer Looks At Our Deep Hot Biosphere And FindsIt

Re: SETI [ASTRO] Astronomer Looks At Our Deep Hot Biosphere And FindsIt

;Alfred A. Aburto Jr. ( (no email) )
Thu, 28 Jan 1999 05:36:46 -0800

Very interesting Larry,

I remember reading an article in Scientific American
discussing this. The article claimed that the major
(really vast) biomass of the Earth was not in the surface
of the Earth but deep within it. Bacteria and other organisms
were found deep within the mantle of the Earth (down to several
hundred miles I think) ...

Al

> Larry Klaes wrote:
>
> >X-Authentication-Warning: brickbat12.mindspring.com: majordom set sender
> to owner-astro using -f
> >Date: Thu, 28 Jan 1999 6:31:00 GMT
> >From: Ron Baalke <BAALKE@kelvin.jpl.nasa.gov>
> >To: astro@lists.mindspring.com
> >Subject: [ASTRO] Astronomer Looks At Our Deep Hot Biosphere And Finds It
> Teeming With Life
> >Sender: owner-astro@brickbat12.mindspring.com
> >Reply-To: Ron Baalke <BAALKE@kelvin.jpl.nasa.gov>
> >
> >News Service
> >Cornell University
> >
> >Contact: David Brand
> >Office: (607) 255-3651
> >E-Mail: deb27@cornell.edu
> >
> >FOR RELEASE: Jan. 26, 1999
> >
> >Cornell astronomer looks at our deep hot biosphere and finds it teeming with
> >life , and controversy
> >
> >ITHACA, N.Y. -- The ideas come crowding in: Deep within the Earth's crust
> >is a vast ecosystem of primitive bacteria nurtured by a reservoir of
> >hydrocarbons of unimaginable size, much of it untapped. Even more: The
> >microbes predate all of the planet's other life forms, existing even before
> >photosynthesis became the preferred life-giving form.
> >
> >In a new book, The Deep Hot Biosphere (Copernicus/Springer-Verlag, $27),
> >Cornell Professor emeritus of astronomy Thomas Gold argues that subterranean
> >bugs are us -- or at least they started the whole evolutionary process, and
> >that there's no looming energy shortage because oil reserves are far greater
> >than predicted.
> >
> >In the hands of anyone other than Gold, the reaction to all this might be a
> >skeptical raised eyebrow. But Gold, as ever the Cornellian gadfly, makes his
> >argument with erudition and conviction. Founder and director of Cornell's
> >Center for Radiophysics and Space Research for two decades, Gold is hardly a
> >stranger to sticking his neck out. He has been proven right in such diverse
> >realms as a theory of hearing, the interpretation of pulsars and a theory of
> >the Earth's axis of rotation.
> >
> >But Gold's most controversial idea, as physicist Freeman Dyson notes in the
> >book's forward, is that of the nonbiological origin of natural gas and oil,
> >which he first proposed more than 20 years ago. These hydrocarbons, Gold
> >postulated, come from deep reservoirs and are composed of the material from
> >which the Earth condensed. The idea that hydrocarbons coalesced from organic
> >material is, he says, quite wrong. The biological molecules found in oil, he
> >avers, show only that the oil is contaminated by microbes, not that it was
> >produced by them.
> >
> >Some researchers, and in particular petroleum geologists, have taken issue
> >with Gold's proposal. They are likely to be even more put out by his new
> >book, which says that these microbes populate the Earth's interior down to
> >a depth of several miles and that everything we see living on the planet's
> >surface is only a small part of the biosphere. The greater part, and the
> >ancient part, is very deep and very hot.
> >
> >Indeed, Gold shows irritation at a scientific community that "has typically
> >sought only surface life in the heavens." Scientists, he writes, "have been
> >hindered by a sort of 'surface chauvinism.'"
> >
> >The heavens?
> >
> >Absolutely, says Gold. "Spectroscopic evidence is very strong for many
> >planetary bodies. The prime example is Titan [a moon of Saturn], which has
> >clouds of ethane and methane. They interchange with the surface, so there
> >must be lakes or oceans of liquid ethane or methane. Once you know that,
> >it's clear they came outside from the body within."
> >
> >Thus, he writes, life on many other planetary bodies seems probable, even
> >though their surfaces are either too hot or too cold to support life.
> >"Subsurface life, however, is another matter. Mars, the satellites of the
> >major planets, many asteroids and even our own moon should be regarded as
> >real prospects for harboring extraterrestrial life of this kind," he writes.
> >
> >On Earth, says Gold, there is clear evidence that subsurface microbial life
> >still exists; for example, in the discovery of primitive microbes in hot
> >ocean vents. "We pulled up bugs from five kilometers down in the granite in
> >Sweden. They were perfectly alive and probably the earliest life form on the
> >planet," he says. The primitive microbes, he notes, are thermophiles and
> >hyperthermophiles, heat-loving archaebacteria.
> >
> >Photosynthesis, his book argues, "developed in offshoots of subterranean
> >life that had progressed toward the surface and then evolved a way to use
> >photons to supply even more chemical energy." When surface conditions such
> >as temperature and liquid water became favorable to life, surface life was
> >able to blossom.
> >
> >In the eons since, the deep world of microbes has had to rely on chemical
> >energy, the oxidation of hydrocarbons, ranging from methane to petroleum, as
> >the organisms emerge upwards from deep reservoirs below. "Every oil-bearing
> >region in the world must have large amounts of microbiology," he says.
> >
> >Writes Gold: "In my view, hydrocarbons are not biology reworked by geology
> >(as the traditional view would hold) but rather geology reworked by biology.
> >In other words, hydrocarbons are primordial, but as they upwell into Earth's
> >outer crust microbial life invades."
> >
> >Reviewing the book, Publishers Weekly noted that "if Gold is right, the
> >planet's oil reserves are far larger than policy-makers expect ... moreover,
> >astronomers hoping for extraterrestrial contacts might want to stop seeking
> >life on other planets and inquire about life in them."
> >
> >-30-
> >
> >Related World Wide Web sites:
> >
> >The following sites provide additional information on this news release. Some
> >might not be part of the Cornell University community, and Cornell has no
> >control over their content or availability.
> >
> >Thomas Gold's overview of his new book, The Deep Hot Biosphere:
>
> >http://www.people.cornell.edu/pages/tg21/
> >
> >
> >