Scientists have found evidence that water was trapped for up to billions of years inside rocks deep in an African gold mine.
"It's really exciting," said Barbara Sherwood Lollar, a University of Toronto geologist who co-authored the study published in the February issue of Chemical Geology. "Nobody has ever identified a billion-year-old component within water before."
She noted that the Earth itself has only existed for around 4.5 billion years.
The study led by Johanna Lippmann-Pipke of the Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf in Leipzig, Germany, looked at groundwater in crevices deep under South Africa's Witwatersrand Basin.
"They are like pockets of water that are interconnected," Sherwood Lollar told CBC's Quirks & Quarks in an interview that was to air Saturday.
The researchers analyzed the water and the elements dissolved in it and found that on average, they were 25 million years old.
But the very oldest was the dissolved neon gas.
"By looking at both how much is there and at the nature of the neon — in particular something called the isotope composition — we can get sense of how long these systems have been there," Sherwood Lollar said.
The neon showed evidence of having been there since the last time the rocks were heated to an extremely high temperature by geologic activity two billion to 2.7 billion years ago. ...
The researchers were looking for water deep underground in hopes of finding life there, and they succeeded in that goal also. They discovered that microbes living in the rock three kilometres underground show many similarities to microbes that live at the bottom of the ocean, Sherwood Lollar said. According to the paper, the life found in the mine represents the deepest microbial ecosystems on Earth ever described by scientists. ...
via Water trapped inside rocks for billions of years - Technology & Science - CBC News.
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Monday, February 28, 2011
Water trapped inside rocks for billions of years
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Archaeology,
biology
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