Discover Yahoo! With Your Friends

Explore news, videos, and much more based on what your friends are reading and watching. Publish your own activity and retain full control.

To get started, first

YOUR FRIENDS' ACTIVITY

    Looking for the origins of life in a B.C. lake

    A team of Canadian and American scientists is exploring two remote B.C. lakes, employing deepwater submersibles to study the living processes behind certain ancient rock structures. They hope these might shed light on the earliest forms of microbe-based life, both here on Earth and in outer space.

    Sponsored by both NASA and the Canadian Space Agency, the now seven-year-old Pavilion Lake Research Project expanded from its eponymous origins in July to nearby Kelly Lake, by the town of Clinton, B.C.

    The researchers are examining the origins of a specific and very ancient sedimentary formation formed by algae and a certain type of bacteria, in the process fine-turning exploratory techniques and clues that they feel might be useful on future space missions.

    "There are these rocks in the lake called microbialites that are built in some way by the bacteria living on the surface of the rock structure," explains principal investigator Darlene Lim, a limnologist, or lake scientist, at NASA's Ames Research Centre in California.

    "What we're trying to figure out is what the role of these microbes is in building up these rocks, both in a present-day sense and in a past sense."

    From about 2.5 billion years ago until about 500 million years ago, microbialites were very common, and they remain among the earliest remnants of life on the planet.

    As it happens, Pavilion Lake and Kelly Lake have an unusual amount and diversity of microbialites, in shapes ranging from artichoke-like to columns.

    By diving down to study the structures, whether in scuba gear or in a one-person submersible, researchers are hoping to uncover the chemical signatures that might be left by these microorganisms and to compare them with what they might find someday on distant asteroids and planets.

    To this end, the microbial ecologists and geochemists from the Pavilion Lake project have been working alongside astronauts, including NASA's Mike Gernhardt and Canada's Chris Hadfield, to study the unique ecosystems.

    For her part, Lim is a veteran of what NASA refers to as its space exploration "analogs," having spent time as well in a Mars simulation base in Canada's High Arctic, among other sites.

    The Pavilion Lake Research Project, though, is somewhat unique among these simulation programs in that it combines the study of exploratory technique with the collection of real data that a veritable village of researchers depends upon.

    She, in fact, was one of the scientists who piloted the DeepWorker subs below the surface this year and she can tell you that, while they are sisters, Kelly Lake is very different from Pavilion.

    "Pavilion is much deeper and much clearer, and the water quality is much higher."

    Piloting through the much murkier green of Kelly Lake, on the other hand, made it difficult to make observations without moving in very close to the shore.

    "When we were at depths of about 120 feet of water, it was difficult to see even a foot in front of you," she says. "So you had to move very slowly. But it was extremely productive, and it was exhilarating when you came across something you weren't expecting."

    Both lakes are scientifically unusual, says Lim, because they're not extreme in any sense. Most places where microbialites are found today are either very salty or very alkaline. Indeed, they are among the most inhospitable places on the planet where few other organisms survive.

    As such, understanding the environmental conditions behind the growth of microbialites in these two lakes paints a better picture of early eras on Earth when these formations were much more common, Lim says.

    Both the space agencies supporting the project are also interested in any lessons they might learn about the logistics of future space missions.

    Despite being underwater, many of the technologies and research protocols surrounding this project are similar to what will be needed in other extreme environments, like space, says Lim.

    "All of these activities, whether they are with submersibles or scuba divers, have analogies to how we'll operate with humans on places like the moon, or Mars, or near-Earth objects in the future."

    For example, she says, "when we send humans to near-Earth objects or Mars, communications will be delayed between the time that you send them and the time that you receive them, because of the distance that it has to travel."

    At Pavilion Lake, they've discovered that allowing that lag between sub operators and teams talking to them on land seemed to allow some scientists to work better because they weren't being interrupted.

    She stresses, however, that the project was not examining more high-pressure emergency or technical situations.

    There is currently much uncertainty in the U.S. about space exploration, particularly now that the shuttle program has ended.

    But NASA is at least preparing the groundwork for manned missions further afield where the Pavilion Lake Research Project's work may come in handy. The Orion spacecraft, currently undergoing testing, is designed for deep space missions to Mars or nearby asteroids sometime around 2025 or 2030.

    "I think I'll be a little old by the time we get ourselves in gear to go to near-Earth objects, but my son and daughter will be perfect for it," Lim laughs. She said she had mixed emotions about the end of the shuttle program this summer, "a bit of nostalgia and melancholy, but also a whole lot of excitement looking forward.

    "We have no other option but to look to the future."

    What do you feel about this article?

     

    48 comments

    • donnie d  •  9 months ago
      and now out comes the primative humans that we call church folks to cry about this..lol
      • MOA 9 months ago
        You forgot to mention the retards that believe in Darwin's fantasy.
      • censor this 9 months ago
        the transitional species between ape-like beings and our direct human ancestors, according to a paper in the latest issue of Science.

        The 1.95- to 1.78-million-year-old hominid, named Australopithecus sediba, walked on two legs and had hips similar to ours, but still retained a few more primitive features, such as longer arms and a smaller brain. This human relative may have given rise to Homo erectus, "Upright Man," or to Homo habilis aka "Handy Man," who was the earliest known human.

        "Further studies will tell, but A. sediba should act as a Rosetta Stone to unlocking just what makes up the genus Homo," project leader Lee Berger told Discovery News.

        "Being that we have very complete specimens of different sexes, derived from a single moment in time, we have an opportunity to explore questions that relate both to ancestral forms, as well as to potentially descendant species," added Berger, a senior research officer and director of the School of Geosciences at the University of Witwatersrand.

        So much for fantasy you noob. Evolve or perish. Or at least watch something other than TMZ and Billy Graham.
      • Jo Piper 9 months ago
        Donnie: Your type of thinking certainly has its origin in primordial soup of some sort.
        You refuse to belief in God yet pray there isn't a Hell!
    • Frozen Canuck  •  9 months ago
      If God created Man then he also endowed us with our courious, questioning nature. Science pulls the cloth off of superstition. Funny how those who criticize science do it through the mediums science developed, ie the computer, radio, TV, print media etc. Or yet again criticize science yet depend on medicine, engineering, transportation, agriculture etc. I'm sure my point is clear.
      • Bob Bob 9 months ago
        If everything needs a creator who created god..........
    • Jack W  •  9 months ago
      Spending millions for nothing... The origin of the Earth is known... GOD created everything and the Earth is HIS Beautiful Creation. . But, of course... some people deny His Creation because they hate GOD... and their deeds belong to the darknes..Spending millions to find what is right in front of everyones eyes... How sad and foolish..
      • tom 9 months ago
        True North most people who post here are bound to hell on a one way ticket,dont waste your time throwing pearls before swine.
      • Common Sense 9 months ago
        YEA WELL...SOME OF US WOULD LIKE TO KNOW how GOD CREATED LIFE :)
      • Jack W 9 months ago
        Read the Bible and beleive It because it is the only truth you will ever find in your life...You will know the truth and it will set you free......
    • Anonymous  •  9 months ago
      Evolutionists are descendants of apes
      • Fry 9 months ago
        and if it were the 1600s you would burn them alive at the stake as a heretic for having differing views, right?
      • A Yahoo! User 9 months ago
        We are descended from ape like ancestors as are you.
      • tuffi 9 months ago
        I think you missed the point the state ment was by Dariwn is that we have a common ancestor
    • kevin  •  9 months ago
      while they are it why not go look for ogopogo while they are in BC :P
      • A Yahoo! User 9 months ago
        Much like god, it doesn't exist.
      • tupacson 9 months ago
        reaper, god is real but religion disgraces his/her name
    • nedboer2  •  9 months ago
      The fool says in his hart ,there is no god ( psalms ) . (His inviseble qualitys are clearly seen from the world creation onward .because they are percieved by the tthings made ,even his eternal power and Godship , so that they are inexcuseble . romans 1;20 .
    • TootyBoody  •  9 months ago
      Evolution is real. Virus replication adaptation to the environment is proof. Life forms change.
    • Smuddy  •  9 months ago
      To all the bible thumpers, You're following a book that was written when people thought the earth was flat and didn't understand what lightning was, etc,etc.
      A very uninformed time, we now have answers to these questions, yet you still believe in this fairy tale some jerk wrote!
    • dangerous dale  •  9 months ago
      in the beginning God created the Heavens and the earth. we don't know how much time passed before mankind came on the scene. there is nothing wrong with learning more about the world we live in. here are some fundamental truths contained in the Bible:

      the life of the flesh is in the blood. this is repeated many times

      God sits upon the circle of the earth. the earth is round.

      all species reproduce after their own kind.

      the things which are seen are made of things which are not seen. nobody has seen an electron.

      that is only a sampling of all the things the Bible teaches
    • Observer  •  9 months ago
      The age old God vs science rant has emerged again when in reality, this "scientific" adventure is nothing more than a major waste of money on a project whose outcome will make NO difference in the grand scheme of things.
    • markleaman50  •  9 months ago
      If you want to know about the origins of life, consult genisis in your Holy Bible, its all right there baby!
    • len  •  9 months ago
      The Bible agrees with science to those who understand how to read and research. The only difference is it can prove what is written and throws in a bonus in that prophesies have and are coming true.
    • horse  •  9 months ago
      2 billion years ago the lake wasn't there. Why don't you look in the oceans where evolution is taking place NOW. Use my tax money wisely.
    • snark  •  9 months ago
      I consider the above scientific study to be directed at an audience with relative intelligence rather than to attract those who see it as an opportunity to convert those who have embraced evolution as holy law. Please return to your closet.
    • ♥Bettsy♥  •  9 months ago
      Oh please....people would rather believe in aliens? I'm sure they'd have been here if there were any. The universe, after all, has been around forever.
    • Barnacle Bill  •  9 months ago
      "We have no other option but to look to the future."
      Yes We do!
      We look in the past to predict the future.
      Anything else is a dream we hope will come true.
    • snark  •  9 months ago
      Question to our listening Creationists...' If God is Almighty, then why does He require praise and worship?' Does He also suffer from insecurity, or is that just us?
    • AnTi-CoRp  •  9 months ago
      look at the BC born and raised if you want the beginning of time,, simpletons living in the 80's mindset, neanderthalic anti everything here,, beautiful place ugly minded people.
    • Inacoma123  •  9 months ago
      " and a certain type of bacteria, in the process fine-turning exploratory techniques and clues that they feel might be useful on future space missions."

      Up to the usual Yahoo standards of proof reading I see
    • Cassandra  •  9 months ago
      Arguing with bible thumpers is a waste of time and effort. These people have already
      made up their minds, and don't want to be confused with the facts.
    [ [ [['xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx', 11]], '27013743', '0' ], [ [['keyword', 9999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999]], 'videoID', '1', 'overwrite-pre-description', 'overwrite-link-string', 'overwrite-link-url' ] ]

    News for You

    • Wrong man was executed in Texas, probe says
      Wrong man was executed in Texas, probe says

      He was the spitting image of the killer, had the same first name and was near the scene of the crime at the fateful hour: Carlos DeLuna paid the ultimate price and was executed in place of someone else in Texas in 1989, a report out Tuesday found.

    • Sunday Solar Eclipse Visible from National Parks
      Sunday Solar Eclipse Visible from National Parks

      When the sun vanishes behind the moon for the first time over the United States in this century, what better place to enjoy the view than from one of the 154 national parks that stand in its path?

    • Dancing With The Stars Elimination Surprise: Which Couple Didn't Make The Finals?
      Dancing With The Stars Elimination Surprise: Which Couple Didn't Make The Finals?

      "Dancing with the Stars" kicks off its Season 14 finals next week - and in a surprising twist, Katherine Jenkins will be among those competing for mirrorball glory.(SPOILER: This story contains the elimination news from Tuesday's "DWTS.")

    • Sugar can make you dumb, US scientists warn
      Sugar can make you dumb, US scientists warn

      Eating too much sugar can eat away at your brainpower, according to US scientists who published a study Tuesday showing how a steady diet of high-fructose corn syrup sapped lab rats' memories.

    • Mladic taunts survivors at start of genocide trial
      Mladic taunts survivors at start of genocide trial

      THE HAGUE (Reuters) - Bosnian Serb general Ratko Mladic made a throat-slitting gesture to a woman who lost her son, husband and brothers in the Srebenica massacre at the start of his trial on Wednesday for some of the worst atrocities in Europe since World War Two. Mladic, now 70, flashed a defiant thumbs-up as he entered the courtroom - the last of the main protagonists in the Balkan wars of the 1990s to go on trial at the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia in The Hague.  …

    • Illinois bride found stabbed to death in wedding gown

      CHICAGO (Reuters) - A bride still dressed in her wedding gown was found stabbed to death in the bathtub of her suburban Chicago apartment, authorities said on Monday. The body of the victim, 25-year-old Estrella Carrera of Burbank, Illinois, was discovered by police officers sent to her home to check on her on Sunday, a day after she was due to pick up her two young children from a relative, police said. ...

    • Finding God -- or maybe just comfort -- in candy
      Finding God -- or maybe just comfort -- in candy

      Can a lollipop wrapped in a Bible verse help people come to Jesus? Can a piece of chocolate bring a moment of bliss? Or how about just a bit of comfort after a bad day?

    Search