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April 24, 2024

Hidden biosphere discovered beneath world's driest hot desert

Study site, showing digging works and lab truck. Credit: Lucas Horstmann, GFZ-Potsdam
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Study site, showing digging works and lab truck. Credit: Lucas Horstmann, GFZ-Potsdam

In a finding with implications for the search for extraterrestrial life, researchers have discovered microbial life 13 feet below Earth's most inhospitable desert. The research is in the journal PNAS Nexus.

The Atacama Desert in northern Chile is the driest hot desert in the world. Higher life forms are almost entirely absent, but the hyper-arid soil, rich in and sulfates, does harbor bacteria.

The first 80 centimeters of soil is thought to be a possible refuge from harsh UV light, a place where some water might be found. But what of deeper horizons? Dirk Wagner and colleagues sought to extend understanding of the desert's biota to the deep subsurface world. The authors dug more than four meters down in a playa of the Yungay Valley to collect .

The authors devised a novel extraction method to ensure that the sampled DNA was from living organisms.

The upper part of the sampled soil profile. Credit: Dirk Wagner, GFZ-Potsdam
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The upper part of the sampled soil profile. Credit: Dirk Wagner, GFZ-Potsdam
Researchers and lab truck at Yungay Playa. Credit: Lucas Horstmann, GFZ-Potsdam
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Researchers and lab truck at Yungay Playa. Credit: Lucas Horstmann, GFZ-Potsdam

Loose DNA was first washed out, then DNA inside intact cells was extracted for sequencing. In the upper 80 cm of playa sediments, were dominated by Firmicutes. Below 200 cm, a different microbial community was discovered, dominated by Actinobacteria.

Some bacteria showed genetic similarity to Geodermatophilus pulveris and Modestobacter caceresii. The authors suggest that this community might have colonized the soil 19,000 years ago, before being buried by playa deposits, and hypothesize that the community could continue downwards for an indefinite distance, representing a previously unknown deep biosphere under hyper-arid desert soils. The deep bacterial community possibly relies on gypsum for water.

The authors note that Mars also has gypsum deposits, which could theoretically serve as a source of water for microbial life.

Yungay Playa with typical dry cracks. Credit: Lucas Horstmann, GFZ-Potsdam
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Yungay Playa with typical dry cracks. Credit: Lucas Horstmann, GFZ-Potsdam
A view of Yungay Playa. Credit: Dirk Wagner, GFZ-Potsdam
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A view of Yungay Playa. Credit: Dirk Wagner, GFZ-Potsdam

More information: Lucas Horstmann et al, Persistent microbial communities in hyperarid subsurface habitats of the Atacama Desert: Insights from intracellular DNA analysis, PNAS Nexus (2024).

Journal information: PNAS Nexus

Provided by PNAS Nexus

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