Scientific Drilling (Sep 2007)

Exploring Subseafloor Life with the Integrated Ocean Drilling Program

  • Patricia Sobecky,
  • Paul Kemp,
  • Kenji Kato,
  • Bo Barker Jørgensen,
  • Timothy Ferdelman,
  • Fumio Inagaki,
  • Steven D’Hondt,
  • Ken Takai,
  • Mitchell Sogin

DOI
https://doi.org/10.2204/iodp.sd.5.03.2007
Journal volume & issue
no. 5
pp. 26 – 37

Abstract

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Deep drilling of marine sediments and igneous crust offers a unique opportunity to explore how life persists and evolves in the Earth’s deepest subsurface ecosystems. Resource availability deep beneath the seafloor may impose constraints on microbial growth and dispersal patterns that differ greatly from those in the surface world. Processes that mediate microbial evolution and diversity may also be very different in these habitats, which approach and probably passthe extreme limits of life. Communities in parts of the deep subsurface may resemble primordial microbial ecosystems, and may serve as analogues of life on other planetary bodies, such as Mars or Europa, that have or once had water.