Tracks In Iron Provide An Insightful Map Of Microbial World
Article originally published in September, 1999
MADISON - Reading the narrow bands of iron found in some sedimentary rocks,
scientists may have found a way to assess microbial populations across time
and space, opening a window to the early history of life on Earth and
possibly other planets.
Writing this week in the journal Science, a team of scientists led by
University of Wisconsin-Madison geochemist Brian L. Beard describes a
geochemical signature in iron indicative of life. If the technique is
confirmed and refined, it could be used to trace the distribution of
Earth's microorganisms in the distant past, and could help resolve disputes
about the existence of past life on other planets such as Mars.
"This could be an ideal biosignature," Beard says in describing a set of
iron isotope-sorting experiments designed to determine if iron found in
different kinds of rocks has been metabolized by microorganisms.
Iron is vital to plant, animal and microbial life. Nearly all organisms
ingest it in the course of daily life. If scientists can devise a method to
distinguish between iron that has been processed by a living organism and
iron that has not been metabolized, they will have a way to measure the
distribution of microbes on Earth billions of years ago.
Because iron is common on the moon, planets and other objects in space, the
technique could be used to detect signs of past life beyond our own planet.
Beard's group measured the isotopic composition of iron from two distinct
sources: sedimentary rock and igneous rock. Sedimentary rock reflects the
accumulation of sediments, including organic material and trace elements
such as iron. Igneous rock is forged deep in the Earth at very high
temperatures where life is absent. It also can contain iron.
Working in collaboration with scientists from NASA's Jet Propulsion
Laboratory and the Institute for Great Lakes Study at UW-Milwaukee, the
Wisconsin team sampled the isotopic composition of iron from the two
sources by incinerating samples of iron and measuring charged particles
from the reaction is a mass spectrometer, a device that sorts and counts
ionized particles.
Isotopes from sedimentary rock, says Beard, match the isotopic signature of
iron ingested and metabolized by bacteria in the lab: "What we found in the
biological experiments was that microbes produce a measurable iron isotope
fractionation. We wondered if inorganic processes might have the same
effects, but we found that the isotopic composition of iron in igneous
rocks is constant."
Knowing this, it may now be possible for scientists to look at sedimentary
rock and gain a sense of the worldwide ebb and flow of microbial
populations in the distant past, perhaps as far back as 2 billion years
ago, when the Earth's oceans were full of soluble iron. Such insight may
help show how life evolved on Earth.
Beard says his group next plans to apply the technique to a piece of the
Mars Rock, a controversial meteorite that some scientists believe harbors
evidence of past microbial life on the Red Planet. It could also be used to
screen samples brought back to Earth from planned NASA missions to Mars.
Co-authors of the paper published in Science include Clark Johnson, a
professor of geology and geophysics at UW-Madison; Lea Cox, Henry Sun and
Kenneth Nealson of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif.;
and Carmen Aguilar of the Institute for Great Lakes Study at UW-Milwaukee.
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Writer: Terry Devitt (608) 262-8282; trdevitt@facstaff.wisc.edu
Contact:Brian Beard (608) 262-1806, beardb@geology.wisc.edu;
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