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Deep Sea Microbiology

All articles tagged with #deep sea microbiology

Deep-sea chemosynthetic wrinkles rewrite clues to ancient life
science17 days ago

Deep-sea chemosynthetic wrinkles rewrite clues to ancient life

In Morocco’s Dadès Valley, researchers found wrinkle-like textures preserved on 180-million-year-old deep-water turbidites. Rather than photosynthetic algae, these textures appear to be created by chemosynthetic microbial mats that thrived below the photic zone. Evidence included carbon enrichment beneath the wrinkles and modern deep-sea observations of chemo-mats. The finding suggests such wrinkle structures can form in aphotic environments, broadening where scientists search for ancient microbial life and prompting a reevaluation of early-life indicators in the rock record.

White Halos on Sunken Barrels Reveal Decades of Alkaline Pollution on LA Seafloor
science3 months ago

White Halos on Sunken Barrels Reveal Decades of Alkaline Pollution on LA Seafloor

Off the Los Angeles coast, scientists found submerged barrels from mid-20th‑century dumping leaking caustic alkaline waste, creating white halos formed by brucite and driving highly alkaline conditions (pH around 12) in surrounding sediments. While earlier concerns about DDT were not borne out, the findings point to alkaline byproducts as the likely pollutant, with about one‑third of barrels showing halos and nearby microbes largely suppressed. The exact contents and full environmental impact remain uncertain, but the evidence shows lasting, localized disruption of marine life for decades.