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mineral Mars dapat
dihubungkan ke mikroba
Mars mineral could be linked to microbes
Date:
May 20, 2014
Source:
Australian National University
Summary:
Scientists have discovered that living organisms on
Earth were capable of making a mineral that may also be found on Mars.
Scientists had believed deposits of the clay-mineral stevensite could only be
formed in harsh conditions like volcanic lava and hot alkali lakes. However
researchers have now found living microbes create an environment that allows
stevensite to form, raising new questions about the stevensite found on Mars.
....................
Scientists have discovered that the earliest living
organisms on Earth were capable of making a mineral that may be found on Mars.
The
clay-mineral stevensite has been used since ancient times and was used by
Nubian women as a beauty treatment, but scientists had believed deposits could
only be formed in harsh conditions like volcanic lava and hot alkali lakes.
Researchers
led by Dr Bob Burne from the ANU Research School of Earth Sciences have found
living microbes create an environment that allows stevensite to form, raising
new questions about the stevensite found on Mars.
"It's
much more likely that the stevensite on Mars is made geologically, from
volcanic activity," Dr Burne said.
"But
our finding -- that stevensite can form around biological organisms -- will
encourage re-interpretation of these Martian deposits and their possible links
to life on that planet."
Dr Burne and
his colleagues from ANU, University of Western Australia and rock imaging
company Lithicon, have found microbes can become encrusted by stevensite, which
protects their delicate insides and provides the rigidity to allow them to
build reef-like structures called "microbialites."
"Microbialites
are the earliest large-scale evidence of life on Earth," Dr Burne said.
"They demonstrate how microscopic organisms are able to join together to
build enormous structures that sometimes rivalled the size of today's coral
reefs."
He said the
process still happens today in some isolated places like Shark Bay and Lake
Clifton in Western Australia.
"Stevensite
is usually assumed to require highly alkaline conditions to form, such as
volcanic soda lakes. But our stevensite microbialites grow in a lake less salty
than seawater and with near-neutral pH."
One of the
paper's authors, Dr Penny King from ANU, is a science co-investigator on NASA's
Mars Curiosity rover, which uncovered the presence of possible Martian
stevensite.
The findings
also have implications for how some of the world's largest oil reservoirs were
formed.
The
discovery was made using ANU-developed imaging technology licensed to Lithicon.
The data was run on Raijin, the most powerful supercomputer in the Southern
Hemisphere, based at the National Computational Infrastructure in Canberra.
Story
Source:
The above
story is based on materials provided by Australian National University. Note: Materials
may be edited for content and length.
Journal
Reference:
- R. V. Burne, L. S. Moore, A. G. Christy, U. Troitzsch, P. L. King, A. M. Carnerup, P. J. Hamilton. Stevensite in the modern thrombolites of Lake Clifton, Western Australia: A missing link in microbialite mineralization? Geology, 2014; DOI: 10.1130/G35484.1
Cite This
Page:
Australian National University.
"Mars mineral could be linked to microbes." ScienceDaily.
ScienceDaily, 20 May 2014.
<www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2014/05/140520100529.htm>.
