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Discovering
new life at the bottom of the sea
University Of Virginia Students Find Colorful Sea Floor
March 8, 2004 --
Humans know more about the surface of the moon than
the bottom of the sea. But there is no life on the moon. The sea
is full of life, and scientists are redefining
the meaning of life by the strange and fascinating life forms they find at the
sea bottom.
Through
projects led by Steve Macko, professor of environmental sciences
at the University of Virginia, undergraduate and graduate students
have, during the
past five years, made 31 ocean expeditions for the prospect of diving to the
sea floor off the coast of the Carolinas and in the Gulf of Mexico. They have
gone as deep as two miles below the surface and have found strange and fascinating
creatures.
Such
as 250-year-old mouthless tubeworms that eat bacteria. And
worms that live and feed on toxic frozen methane. No such
thing
exists on the moon, or
on any
known planet. Until the discovery of these organisms only a couple of decades
ago, scientists would have believed that life simply could not exist in such
harsh and extreme conditions.
But
there it is.
“The
space program is looking for signs of strange life on Mars,
but we have it right here on the sea bottom,” Macko
said. “We’re possibly
looking at the very origins of life, at the ways life developed in extreme
conditions before photosynthesis.”
Most
people have never heard of Green Canyon, Brine Pool or Bush
Hill. Only
a few hundred people have been to these locations, all
far underwater
in
the Gulf
of Mexico. But Stephanie Harbeson, a 22-year-old U.Va. first-year graduate
student has been there. Last November she made two dives aboard the
Johnson-Sea Link
I, a four-person submarine operated by the Harbor Branch Oceanographic
Institute in Ft. Pierce, Florida.
“The
sea goes completely black at 800 feet,” she said, describing
the descent from blue surface to lightless bottom. But along the
way there is bioluminescence, sparkles of light from billions
of drifting microorganisms that
glow in the dark.
She
went down to 2,100 feet and 1,800 feet. At the sea bottom,
with the sub’s
external lamps turned on, she found the seafloor alive with color
-- vivid reds, brilliant blues, and a countless assortment
of blends in between. Bubbles of
methane rose from the sediment. She observed writhing worms, huge
clams and mussels and an assortment of odd fish, all adapted
to conditions so extreme, most other
life forms would perish there in an instant.
On
her second dive, she and the other scientists saw a creature
that no human
had ever seen.
“A
giant anemone, free swimming, with long tentacles like a
man-of-war. We shot
15 minutes of video.”
When
they came to the surface and re-boarded the mother ship,
everyone on board gathered to watch
the video, seeing – second-hand – what the young
graduate student had seen first-hand, pulsating just outside
the bubble window of her sub.
Bill
Gilhooly, a U.Va. third-year geochemistry doctoral student
with Macko, went on three research
cruises before going on
his first dive.
Bad weather
hampered
his other opportunities, and his desire. But when he finally
got a berth to the bottom, he saw huge tubeworm colonies.
Some
of his dives were exploratory, simply traveling along the
nearly featureless bottom in previously unexplored
areas, looking
for colonies
of life. Generally
they found a lot of sediment. Once, however, he did observe
a Dumbo octopus, a rarely seen creature with giant flapping
appendages
that look like
huge ears.
“The
best thing is seeing these things with your own eyes, and
knowing that very few people will have this opportunity,” he
said. “It’s
always a bit of a letdown when you come back to the surface.”
Most
dives are three- to four-hours long.
During
Harbeson’s
cruise last fall, she spent nearly two weeks aboard the Seward
Johnson II, a 168-foot research vessel, equipped with wet
and dry labs
and accommodations for
38 people. She loved her time at sea, living a
dream it seemed, from the time she left the dock
at Port
Fourchon, La., through
the too-brief
time
of her
dives, to the moment she returned to shore at Gulfport,
Miss.
“On
ship you get to learn things hands on, first-hand,” she
said. “I
spent one 11-hour day dissecting tube worms that
had been brought up. That is as fresh as it gets. Up until that moment I had
only dissected a frog in ninth
grade. ”
Gilhooly
once spent 36 hours in the ship’s lab preparing samples fresh
from the sea.
“When
the work comes, it’s pretty much non-stop,” he
said. “And
when samples are brought to the surface,
everybody wants to see them.”
Gilhooly
and Harbeson enjoy the collegiality of shipboard life. They
meet and work
with
scientists from an
assortment of disciplines
--
biologists, chemists,
geologists, and hybrids, such as biochemists
and
geochemists.
“It’s
a great collaborative environment on the ship,” Harbeson
said. “Everybody
is interested in what everybody else
is learning. We learn from each other, we share books and knowledge.”
In
addition to study and lab work, the young scientists also find time to sit
in the sun
on deck, eat plenty
of good food
from the
galley,
look at
the oil
platforms in the Gulf, to gaze at the
birds, the sea and their future. Both hope to
continue studying
the
sea.
“This
kind of hands-on research experience is the best way to get
students into the field,” Macko said. “We’re
training the creative young minds of this generation to make
the
discoveries that my generation missed.”
Right
here on planet Earth.
Contact:
Farris Samarrai, (434) 924-3778 |