Record Details

Sources of nutrients and energy for a deep biosphere on Mars

ScholarsArchive at Oregon State University

Field Value
Title Sources of nutrients and energy for a deep biosphere on Mars
Names Fisk, Martin R. (creator)
Giovannoni, Stephen J. (creator)
Date Issued 1999-05-25 (iso8601)
Note Copyrighted by American Geophysical Union.
Abstract Hydrothermal vents appear to be the tip of the subsurface biosphere in the ocean crust. The primary prducers in this biosphere are prokaryotes that tolerate a wide variety of physical and chemical conditions and are versatile in their use of inorganic compounds to drive metabolism. A synthesis of chemical and mineralogical data from Martian meteorites and measurements of the Martian surface suggest that conditions similar to those that make life possible in Earth’s oceanic crust, namely, water, carbon, nutrients, appropriate temperatures, and gradients in redox conditions, also occur within Mars. Chemolithoautotrophic microorganisms capable of living below the seafloor on Earth would probably survive some regions of the Martian subsurface.
Genre Article
Identifier Fisk, M., and S. Giovannoni (1999), Sources of nutrients and energy for a deep biosphere on Mars, J. Geophys. Res., 104(E5), 11805-11815.

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