UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO
Ancient, hydrogen-rich waters discovered deep underground at locations
around the world.
A quantum change in our understanding of how
much of Earth’s crust may be habitable.
A team of scientists, led by
the University of Toronto’s Barbara Sherwood Lollar, has mapped the location of
hydrogen-rich waters found trapped kilometres beneath Earth’s surface in rock
fractures in Canada, South Africa and Scandinavia.
Common in Precambrian Shield rocks – the
oldest rocks on Earth – the ancient waters have a chemistry similar to that
found near deep sea vents, suggesting these waters can support microbes living
in isolation from the surface.
The study, to be published in Nature on
December 18, includes data from 19 different mine sites that were explored by
Sherwood Lollar, a geoscientist at U of T’s Department of Earth Sciences, U of
T senior research associate Georges Lacrampe-Couloume, and colleagues at Oxford
and Princeton universities.
The scientists also explain how two chemical
reactions combine to produce substantial quantities of hydrogen, doubling
estimates of global production from these processes which had previously been
based only on hydrogen coming out of the ocean floor.
“This represents a quantum change in our
understanding of the total volume of Earth’s crust that may be habitable,” said
Sherwood Lollar.
Until now, none of the estimates of global
hydrogen production sustaining deep microbial populations had included a
contribution from the ancient continents. Since Precambrian rocks make up more
than 70 per cent of the surface of Earth’s crust, Sherwood Lollar likens these
terrains to “a sleeping giant, a huge area that has now been discovered to be a
source of possible energy for life.”
One process, known as radiolytic
decomposition of water, involves water undergoing a breakdown into hydrogen
when exposed to radiation. The other is a chemical reaction called
serpentization, a mineral alteration reaction that is common in such ancient
rocks.
This study has important implications for the
search for deep microbial life. Quantifying the global hydrogen budget is key
to understanding the amount of the Earth’s biomass that is in the subsurface,
as many deep ecosystems contain chemolithotrophic – so-called “rock-eating” –
organisms that consume hydrogen. In the deep gold mines of South Africa, and
under the sea, at hydrothermal vents where breaks in the fissure of Earth’s
surface that release geothermally heated waters – hydrogen-rich fluids host
complex microbial communities that are nurtured by the chemicals dissolved in
the fluids.
This study identifies a global network of sites with hydrogen-rich
waters that will be targeted for exploration for deep life over the coming
years.
Further, because Mars – like the Precambrian
crust – consists of billions-of-year-old rocks with hydrogen-producing
potential, this finding has ramifications for astrobiology. “If the ancient
rocks of Earth are producing this much hydrogen, it may be that similar
processes are taking place on Mars,” said Sherwood Lollar.
Other key members of the research team are
Chris Ballentine of Oxford University, Tulis Onstott at Princeton University
and Georges Lacrampe-Couloume of the University of Toronto. The research was
funded by the Canada Research Chairs program, the Natural Sciences &
Engineering Research Council, the Sloan Foundation Deep Carbon Observatory, the
Canadian Space Agency and the National Science Foundation.
