| In a Fairbanks
lab not too long ago, a man squinted through a microscope at a slide
of melting ice from the Fox permafrost tunnel. Richard Hoover knew
he was looking at organisms that were alive when the wooly mammoth
and saber-toothed cat roamed Alaska, but he didn’t expect
to see them born again.
“When they thawed out, they immediately started
swimming,” said Hoover, an astrobiologist with NASA’s
National Space Science and Technology Center in Huntsville, Alabama.
“These guys had been frozen since the Pleistocene, and here
they were swimming around.”
Resurrected after 30,000 years,
those bacteria may be proof that life can exist on Mars and other
planets, Hoover said. He and his colleagues recently authored a
paper in which they introduced the world to Carnobacterium pleistocenium,
bacteria known to exist only one place in the world—the Fox
permafrost tunnel.
The Fox permafrost tunnel dates back to 1965, when
engineers for the Army’s Cold Region Research and Engineering
Laboratory finished drilling a tunnel 360 feet into a hillside north
of Fairbanks. Large enough to walk in, the tunnel stays below freezing
all year; from its walls jut ancient bones, mosses, soils and ice
wedges. The bottom of a frozen lake in a tunnel wall grabbed Hoover’s
attention in 1999 when he came to Alaska to scout for life in the
ice.
Hoover saw a golden brown layer at the base of
an ancient pond. Thinking the ice contained diatoms—forms
of algae that often settle in lake bottoms—he tapped his stainless
steel sampling tool into the tunnel wall and dropped a plug of brownish
ice into a sealed tube. To check what he had, he took a small sample
to microbiologist Joan Braddock’s lab at UAF.
“The golden brown stuff wasn’t diatoms,”
Hoover said. “That’s when we watched them swimming around
under the microscope. At that point, we knew we had an assemblage
of rod-shaped bacteria, but no one knew if they were common or something
totally different.”
The bacteria, so small that 25,000 of them lined
up nose to tail would span an inch, are new to scientific description.
Back in the lab at Huntsville, Elena Pikuta performed a detailed
analysis on the bacteria and found that they eat sugars and excrete
acetate ethyl alcohol and carbon dioxide. It took five years for
Carnobacterium pleistocenium to make its official debut, when it
appeared in the January 2005 edition of the International Journal
of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology.
Hoover is excited to know that the little creatures
suspended in the permafrost hint that life could survive on other
planets.
“It’s another point of evidence that
microorganisms are preserved in ice and can remain viable for long
periods of time,” he said. “If life has ever existed
on Mars, it could have been preserved in an ancient sea of ice,
like the one that was just discovered on Mars.”
Hoover also said the discovery proves the importance
of the Fox permafrost tunnel, maintained by the U.S. Army Cold Region
Research and Engineering Laboratory at Fort Wainwright.
“There’s only two places like that
on planet Earth,” Hoover said. “One in Siberia in Yakutsk
Russia, and the other one in Fairbanks, Alaska. It’s absolutely
clear that the Fox tunnel is a valuable planetary resource.” |
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Richard Hoover of NASA takes ice samples from
the permafrost tunnel in Fox, Alaska. In these samples, he found
bacteria not known to science that began moving when he thawed the
ice sample. Photo courtesy Richard Hoover.

Living bacteria, shown in green, that astrobiologist
Richard Hoover found within the ice of the Fox permafrost tunnel.
The bacteria are about 32,000 years old. Photo courtesy Richard
Hoover. |
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