Blood Falls

Blood Falls is an outflow of an iron oxide-tainted plume of saltwater, occurring at the tongue of the Taylor Glacier onto the ice-covered surface of West Lake Bonney in the Taylor Valley of the McMurdo Dry Valleys in Victoria Land, East Antarctica.

Iron-rich hypersaline water sporadically emerges from small fissures in the ice cascades. The saltwater source is a subglacial pool of unknown size overlain by about 400 meters of ice at several kilometers from its tiny outlet at Blood Falls.

The reddish deposit was found in 1911 by the Australian geologist Griffith Taylor, who first explored the valley that bears his name.[1] The Antarctica pioneers first attributed the red color to red algae, but later it was proven to be due only to iron oxides.

Contents

Geochemistry

Poorly soluble hydrous ferric oxides are deposited at the surface of ice after the ferrous ions present in the unfrozen saltwater are oxidized in contact with atmospheric oxygen. The more soluble ferrous ions initially are dissolved in old seawater trapped in an ancient pocket remaining from the Antarctic Ocean when a fjord was isolated by the glacier in its progression during the Miocene period, some 5 million years ago when the sea level was higher than today.

Unlike most Antarctic glaciers, the Taylor glacier is not frozen to the bedrock, probably, because of the presence of salts concentrated by the crystallization of the ancient seawater imprisoned below it. Salt cryo-concentration occurred in the deep relict seawater when pure ice crystallized and expelled its dissolved salts as it cooled down because of the heat exchange of the captive liquid seawater with the enormous ice mass of the glacier. As a consequence, the trapped seawater was concentrated in brines with a salinity two to three times that of the mean ocean water. A second mechanism sometimes also explaining the formation of hypersaline brines is the water evaporation of surface lakes directly exposed to the very dry polar atmosphere in the McMurdo Dry Valleys. The analyses of stable isotopes of water allow, in principle, to distinguish between both processes as long as there is no mixing between differently formed brines. [2]

Hypersaline fluid, sampled fortuitously through a crack in the ice, was oxygen-free and rich in sulfate and ferrous ion. Sulfate is a remnant geochemical signature of marine conditions while soluble divalent iron likely was liberated under reducing conditions from the subglacial bedrock minerals weathered by microbial activity.

Microbial ecosystem

Chemical and microbial analyses both indicate that a rare subglacial ecosystem of autotrophic bacteria developed that metabolizes sulfate and ferric ions.[3][4] According to geomicrobiologist Jill Mikucki at Dartmouth College, water samples from Blood Falls contained at least 17 different types of microbes, and almost no oxygen.[3] An explanation may be that the microbes use sulfate as a catalyst to respire with ferric ions and metabolize the trace levels of organic matter trapped with them. Such a metabolic process had never before been observed in nature.[3]

A puzzling observation is the coexistence of Fe2+ and SO42– ions under anoxic conditions. No sulfide anions (HS) are found in the system. This suggests an intricate and poorly-understood interaction between the sulfur and the iron biochemical cycles.

Implications for the Snowball Earth hypothesis

According to Mikucki et al. (2009), the now-inaccessible subglacial pool was sealed off 1.5 to 2 million years ago and transformed into a kind of "time capsule," isolating the ancient microbial population for a sufficiently long time to evolve independently of other similar marine organisms. It explains how other microorganisms could have survived when the Earth (according to the Snowball Earth hypothesis) was entirely frozen over.

Ice-covered oceans might have been the only refugia for microbial ecosystems when the Earth apparently was covered by glaciers at tropical latitudes during the Proterozoic eon about 650 – 750 millions years ago.

Implications for astrobiology

This unusual place offers scientists a unique opportunity to study deep subsurface microbial life in extreme conditions without the need to drill deep boreholes in the polar ice cap, with the associated contamination risk of a fragile and still-intact environment.

The study of harsh environments on Earth is useful to understand the range of conditions to which life can adapt and to advance assessment of the possibility of life elsewhere in the solar system, in places such as Mars or Europa, an ice-covered moon of Jupiter. Scientists of the NASA Astrobiology Institute speculate that these worlds could contain subglacial liquid water environments favorable to hosting elementary forms of life, which would be better protected at depth from ultraviolet and cosmic radiation than on the surface.[5][6][7][8]

See also

References

  1. ^ Ohio State University (2003-11-05). "Explanation offered for Antarctica's 'Blood Falls'". ScienceDaily (Nov. 5, 2003). http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2003/11/031105064856.htm. Retrieved 2009-04-18. 
  2. ^ Horita, Juske (2009). "Isotopic evolution of saline lakes in the low-latitude and polar regions". Aquatic Geochemistry 15 (1): 43–69. doi:10.1007/s10498-008-9050-3. 
  3. ^ a b c Grom, Jackie (2009-04-16). "Ancient ecosystem discovered beneath antarctic glacier". ScienceNOW Daily News. http://sciencenow.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/full/2009/416/2. Retrieved 2009-04-17. 
  4. ^ Mikucki, Jill A.; Ann Pearson, David T. Johnston, Alexandra V. Turchyn, James Farquhar, Daniel P. Schrag, Ariel D. Anbar, John C. Priscu, Peter A. Lee (2009). "A contemporary microbially maintained subglacial ferrous "ocean"". Science 324 (5925): 397–400. doi:10.1126/science.1167350. PMID 19372431. http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/abstract/324/5925/397. Retrieved 2009-04-17. 
  5. ^ Dolci, Wendy; Linda Billings, Helen Matsos (2009-04-18). "Library of Resources " NASA Astrobiology Institute "" (astrobiology.nasa.gov/nai). NASA Astrobiology Institute (NAI). http://astrobiology.nasa.gov/nai/library-of-resources/annual-reports/. Retrieved 2009-04-20. 
  6. ^ "Life – goal 1: Determine if life ever arose on Mars". Mars Exploration. 2005-10-05. http://mars.jpl.nasa.gov/programmissions/science/goal1/. Retrieved 2010-10-17. 
  7. ^ "The case of the missing Mars water" (science.nasa.gov). Science@NASA. 2001-01-05. http://science.nasa.gov/headlines/y2001/ast05jan_1.htm. Retrieved 2009-04-20. 
  8. ^ "Mars: Follow the Water..." (Marsprogram.jpl.nasa.gov/life). Mars Exploration. 2006-02-15. http://marsprogram.jpl.nasa.gov/follow/index.html. Retrieved 2009-04-20. 

Further reading

External links