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2020: Up Next: Sleeping microbes wake up after 100 million years buried under the seafloor

Discussion in 'BBS Hangout' started by Xerobull, Jul 30, 2020.

  1. Xerobull

    Xerobull You son of a b!tch! I'm in!

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    Sleeping microbes wake up after 100 million years buried under the seafloor


    No one knew that single-celled organisms could live so long.

    [​IMG]
    A magnified image shows the revived microbes.
    (Image: © JAMSTEC)

    Microbes found themselves buried in the dirt 101.5 million years ago, back before even Tyrannosaurus rex when Earth’s biggest meat-eating dinosaur, called Spinosaurus roamed the planet. Time passed, continents shifted, oceans rose and fell, great apes emerged, and eventually human beings evolved with the curiosity and skills to dig up those ancient cells. And now, in a Japanese lab, researchers have brought the single-celled organisms back to life.

    Researchers aboard the drill ship JOIDES Resolution collected sediment samples from the bottom of the ocean 10 years ago. The samples came from 328 feet (100 meters) below the 20,000-foot-deep (6,000 m) bottom of the South Pacific Gyre. That's a region of the Pacific Ocean with very few nutrients and little oxygen available for life to survive on, and the researchers were looking for data on how microbes get along in such a remote part of the world.

    said in a statement. "And we wanted to know how long the microbes could sustain their life in a near-absence of food.

    Their results indicate that even cells found in 101.5 million-year-old sediment samples are capable of waking up when oxygen and nutrients become available.

    "At first, I was skeptical, but we found that up to 99.1% of the microbes in sediment deposited 101.5 million years ago were still alive and were ready to eat," Morono said.

    The microbes had ceased all noticeable activity. But when offered nutrients and other necessities of life they became active again.

    To make sure their sample wasn't contaminated with modern microbes, the researchers cracked open the sediment in a highly sterile environment, selecting the microbial cells present and feeding them nutrients exclusively a tiny tube designed not to allow in contaminants.

    The cells responded, many of them quickly. They quickly gobbled up nitrogen and carbon. Within 68 days, the total cell count had quadrupled from the original 6,986.

    Aerobic bacteria — oxygen breathers — were the hardiest cells and most likely to wake up. These tiny organisms were surviving on just the tiny bubbles of air that make their way down into sediment over geologic timescales. It seems that the metabolic rate of aerobic bacteria is just slow enough to allow them to survive for such extended periods.

    The research was published July 28 in the journal Nature Communications.
     
  2. boomboom

    boomboom I GOT '99 PROBLEMS
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    The obligatory..."what could possibly go wrong" post.

    As smart as we think we are, humans are really stupid.
     
  3. Andre0087

    Andre0087 Member

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    Fantastic.
     
    Ubiquitin likes this.
  4. DonkeyMagic

    DonkeyMagic Contributing Member
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  5. Surfguy

    Surfguy Contributing Member

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    I volunteer to be injected with these cells.
     
    Deckard, conquistador#11 and boomboom like this.
  6. Invisible Fan

    Invisible Fan Contributing Member

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    [​IMG]
    Seconded
     
  7. KingCheetah

    KingCheetah Contributing Member

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  8. rocketsjudoka

    rocketsjudoka Contributing Member
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    jiggyfly and FrontRunner like this.
  9. ico4498

    ico4498 Member
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    if the original single celled organism, the one responsible for all life on earth, came for the cosmos ... it probably hibernated way longer and endured much harsher conditions.
     
  10. Surfguy

    Surfguy Contributing Member

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    This makes zombies a real possibility. We just need the right re-animation agent. Maybe the answer lies with these cells? Start the experiments.

    [​IMG]
     
    Xerobull likes this.
  11. PhiSlammaJamma

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    After about 2 1/2 minutes of eating, several microbes burped, and then napped, and while sleeping, were gobbled up by a 400 foot giant beast that eats these particular microbes as appetizers before snacking on researchers. NASA said they want to watch these little microbes very closely, but told the public not to worry about anything going on in Area 583 at this time.
     
    Deckard likes this.
  12. likestohypeguy

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    Dig it up! Let's bring that stuff up here, and mess around with it.
     
    Xerobull likes this.
  13. Haymitch

    Haymitch Custom Title
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    Possible rona cure???
     
  14. donkeypunch

    donkeypunch Contributing Member

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    [​IMG]
     
    TimDuncanDonaut and Joshfast like this.
  15. Phillyrocket

    Phillyrocket Member

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    I saw this movie but it was piranhas if I recall.
     
    conquistador#11 likes this.

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