THE MICROBIAL COMMUNITIES OF SULFUR CAVES: A NEWLY APPRECIATED GEOLOGICALLY DRIVEN SYSTEM ON EARTH AND POTENTIAL MODEL FOR MARS

Show simple item record

dc.contributor.author Boston P.J.
dc.contributor.author Hose L.D.
dc.contributor.author Northup D.E.
dc.contributor.author Spilde M.N.
dc.date.accessioned 2025-03-22T08:33:35Z
dc.date.available 2025-03-22T08:33:35Z
dc.date.issued 2006
dc.identifier https://elibrary.ru/item.asp?id=22143711
dc.identifier.citation Special Paper of the Geological Society of America, 2006, 404, 404. С. 3, 331-344
dc.identifier.issn 0072-1077
dc.identifier.uri https://repository.geologyscience.ru/handle/123456789/48605
dc.description.abstract A handful of investigative teams in several parts of the world are studying abundant biological communities in caves formed by sulfuric-acid speleogenesis. These caves are atypical in terms of origin, chemistry, and ecosystem properties. They prominently display sulfur minerals, characteristic cavity topologies, and notable biological diversity and biological productivity resulting directly from the conditions that produce the caves. Even long-inactive systems still harbor some of these indicators. The microbial and macroscopic ecosystems within sulfuric-acid speleogenetic caves are geologically mediated and maintained. This geological mediation is a theme connecting them with other sulfur-driven ecosystems on Earth, including deep-sea hydrothermal vents, sulfurous near-surface hydrothermal systems, and solfataras. Evidence exists for potentially significant microbial participation in the process of speleogenesis itself. Recent results confirming the high relative abundance of sulfur on Mars, an apparent sedimentary basin with high sulfate concentration, near-surface indicators of ice and water, and trace detection of reduced gases (especially methane) in the Martian atmosphere, possibly deriving from subsurface microbial sources, set the stage for suggesting that sulfuric-acid speleogenetic systems may be useful as astrobiological analogs for hypothetical Mars ecosystems. Unique speleogenetic mechanisms may occur on Mars and could provide subsurface void space suitable for habitationby such hypothetical microbial systems. © 2006 Geological Society of America.
dc.subject ACID SPELEOGENESIS
dc.subject ASTROBIOLOGY
dc.subject EXTRATERRESTRIAL CAVES
dc.subject MARS
dc.subject MICROORGANISMS
dc.subject SULFUR
dc.title THE MICROBIAL COMMUNITIES OF SULFUR CAVES: A NEWLY APPRECIATED GEOLOGICALLY DRIVEN SYSTEM ON EARTH AND POTENTIAL MODEL FOR MARS
dc.type Статья
dc.identifier.doi 10.1130/2006.2404(28)


Files in this item

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

  • ELibrary
    Метаданные публикаций с сайта https://www.elibrary.ru

Show simple item record