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SUNDAY, 19 MAY 2013
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Scientists find microbes at Earth’s deepest spot
Agence France Presse
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PARIS: Scientists said Sunday they had discovered an unexpectedly large and active community of single-cell organisms living on the Pacific sea floor at the deepest site on Earth.

The “surprisingly active” community of microbes exists about 11 km below sea level in the Mariana Trench, one of the world’s most inaccessible places, some 320 km southwest of the Pacific island of Guam.

Surprisingly, researchers found the trench housed almost 10 times more bacteria than a nearby 6-km deep site, living on organic waste from dead sea animals, algae and other microbes that settle on the ocean floor.

Many scientists had thought that the deeper the floor below sea level, the more deprived it would be of food – which has to float all the way from the oxygen-rich surface to the bottom of the ocean.

In fact, the team found the Mariana Trench was unexpectedly rich in organic matter. “Their analysis document that a highly active bacteria community exists in the sediment of the trench, even though the environment is under extreme pressure almost 1,100 times higher than at sea level,” said a statement.

The Mariana Trench made headlines a year ago when Hollywood director James Cameron made history’s first solo trip by submarine to the bottom.

He described a “desolate” and “alien” environment.

Because of its extreme depth, the Mariana Trench is cloaked in perpetual darkness with temperatures just a few degrees above freezing.

The water pressure at the bottom is a crushing 8 tons per square inch – about a thousand times the standard atmospheric pressure at sea level.

Before Cameron, the trench had been visited only once before, and briefly, by a two-man crew in 1960.

For the latest study, an international research team used a specially designed underwater robot with ultrathin sensors to probe the seabed for oxygen consumption in a 2010 expedition.

Scientists cannot remove samples to study in the lab as many of the microorganisms specially adapted to life at these extreme conditions will die due to changes in temperature and pressure.

The team also made videos of the bottom of the trench and confirmed there were very few large animals at these depths.

 
A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Daily Star on March 19, 2013, on page 13.
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Story Summary
Scientists said Sunday they had discovered an unexpectedly large and active community of single-cell organisms living on the Pacific sea floor at the deepest site on Earth.

The "surprisingly active" community of microbes exists about 11 km below sea level in the Mariana Trench, one of the world's most inaccessible places, some 320 km southwest of the Pacific island of Guam.

Surprisingly, researchers found the trench housed almost 10 times more bacteria than a nearby 6-km deep site, living on organic waste from dead sea animals, algae and other microbes that settle on the ocean floor.
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