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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2023-03-14
    Description: Table 1 shows biogeochemical data collected from five depths in the CSW1.1 well at the Coast Range Ophiolite Microbial Observatory, California, USA during a one-day sampling event in June 2016. Included are latitude and longitude of the CSW1.1 well, depth each sample was collected, oxygen level and other water quality parameters such as pH, temperature, and oxidation reduction potential. Hydrogen sulfide was measured via spectrophotometric methods, and anions were measured using ion chromatography. Dissolved gases were measured using a gas chromatograph with a flame ionization detector. Data was collected to understand the fluid chemistry in this well that is quite extreme relative to typical waters at Earth's surface and used to inform both Gibbs energy calculations and microbiological analyses.
    Keywords: alkaliphiles; biogeochemical gradients; Bromide; California, USA; Carbon, inorganic, dissolved; Carbon monoxide; Chloride; CO2 sequestration; Conductivity, electrical; CROMO_CSW1.1; CSW1.1; Depth, well; depth profile; Gas chromatography - Flame Ionization Detection (GC-FID); gas flux; groundwater; Hydrogen; hydrogenotrophy; Hydrogen sulfide; Ion chromatography; Methane; Nitrate; Nitrite; Oxidation reduction (RedOx) potential; Oxygen; pH; Saturation; Serpentinization; Spectrophotometric; Sulfate; Temperature, water; Water sample; WS
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 85 data points
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2024-04-20
    Description: We have measured microbial sulfate reduction rates by ultra sensitive radio tracer incubations in fluids from 11 wells of the actively serpentinizing the Coast Range ophiolite (CA, USA) and Samail ophiolite (Oman). We also determined environmental parameter of the serpentinizing fluids (pH, redox potential and chloride, sulfate, hydrogen, methane and organic acid conentrations. We also determiend the abundance of sulfate reducing taxa in the these fluids.
    Keywords: Binary Object; California_Coast_Ranges; California, USA; Coast_Range_Ophiolite; File content; Oman; ophiolites; radio-tracer; Semail_Oman; Semail_Ophiolite; Serpentinization; Sulfate reducing bacteria abundance; sulfate reduction rates
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 12 data points
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  • 3
  • 4
    Publication Date: 2017-07-01
    Print ISSN: 0016-7037
    Electronic ISSN: 1872-9533
    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology , Geosciences
    Published by Elsevier
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2019-07-19
    Description: Stable carbon isotopes can be powerful biogeochemical markers in the study of life's origins. Biogenic carbon fixation produces organics that are depleted in C-13 by about -20 to -30%0. Less attention has been paid to the isotopic signatures of abiotic processes. The possibility of abiotic processes producing organics with morphologies and isotopic signatures in the biogenic range has been at the center of recent debate over the Earth's earliest microfossils. The abiotic synthesis of organic compounds in hydrothermal environments is one possible source of endogenous organic matter to the prebiotic earth. Simulated hydrothermal settings have been shown to synthesize, among other things, single chain amphiphiles and simple lipids from a mix of CO, CO2, and H2. A key characteristic of these amphiphilic molecules is the ability to self-assemble in aqueous phases into more organized structures called vesicles, which form a selectively permeable boundary and serve the function of containing and concentrating other organic molecules. The ability to form cell like structures also makes these compounds more likely to be mistaken for biogenic. Hydrothermal simulation experiments were conducted from oxalic or formic acid in water at 175 C for 72 hr. The molecular and isotopic composition of the products of these reactions were determined and compared to biogenic fractionations . Preliminary results indicate isotopic fractionation during abiotic hydrocarbon synthesis in hydrothermal environments is on par with biological carbon fixation.
    Keywords: Exobiology
    Type: 21-344-58 , AbSciCon (Astrobiology Science Conference) 2006; Mar 26, 2006 - Mar 30, 2006; Washington, DC; United States
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2019-07-18
    Description: The use of lipid biomarkers and their carbon isotopic compositions are valuable tools for establishing links to ancient microbial ecosystems. Various lipids associated with specific microbial groups can serve as biomarkers for establishing organism source and function in contemporary microbial ecosystems (membrane lipids), and by analogy, potential relevance to ancient organic-rich sedimentary rocks (geolipids). As witnessed by the stromatolite record, benthic microbial mats grew in shallow water lagoonal environments. Our recent work has focused on lipid biomarker analysis of a potential analogue for such ancient mats growing in a set of hypersaline evaporation ponds at Guerrero Negro, Baja California Sur, Mexico. The aerobic, surface layer of this mat (0 to 1 mm) contained a variety of ester-bound fatty acids (FA) representing a diverse bacterial population including cyanobacteria, sulphate reducers (SRB) and heterotrophs. Biomarkers for microeukaryotes detected in this layer included sterols, C-20 polyunsaturated FA and a highly branched isoprenoid, diagnostic for diatoms. Cyanobacteria were also indicated by the presence of a diagnostic set of mid-chain methylalkanes. C-28, to C-34 wax esters (WXE) present in relatively small amounts in the upper 3 mm of the mat are considered biomarkers for green non-sulphur bacteria. Ether-bound isoprenoids were also identified although in considerably lower abundance than ester-bound FA (approx. 1:l0). These complex ether lipids included archatol, hydroxyarchaeol and a C-40 tetraether, all in small amounts. After ether cleavage with boron tribromide, the major recovered isoprenyl was a C-30:1. This C(sub 30;1) yelded squalane after hydrogenation, a known geobiomarker for hypersaline environments in ancient oils and sediments. In this mat, it represents the dominant Archaeal population. The carbon isotopic composition of biomarker lipids were generally depleted relative to the bulk organic material (delta C-13 TOC -10%). Most depleted were the cyanobacterial methylalkanes at -27% with FA such as the SRB biomarker, 10- methyl C-I6, somewhat heavier at -16%, and WXE at -17%. The C-30:1 isoprenyl was most enriched with delta C-13 in the -7 to -11% range, much too heavy to represent the methanogen population responsible for mat methane values measured at -60%.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: Astrobiology Science Conference; Mar 28, 2004 - Apr 01, 2004; Moffett Field, CA; United States
    Format: text
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2019-08-13
    Description: These presentation slides introduce the Astrobiology Resource Metadata Standard (ARMS), a new metadata standard under development at NASA Ames Research Center, in conjunction with the Astrobiology Habitable Environments Database (AHED) project. The intent of this standard is to enable uniform, internet-based search and discovery of astrobiology 'resources', i.e. virtually any product of astrobiology research, including datasets, physical samples, software, publications, websites, images, video, presentations, etc. The current draft of ARMS defines 16 different metadata properties used to describe a given resource, including routine information such as name, resource type, description, personnel, funding, and related publications. But the true power in ARMS lies in four astrobiology-specific pieces of metadata: field site location enables geospatially-restricted search for resources using placenames or geospatial coordinates; research theme associates resources with one of six broad areas of astrobiological research (as identified in the 2015 NASA Astrobiology Strategy document); astrobiology disciplines captures the set of science disciplines most relevant to creation or use of resources; and finally, astrobiology keywords characterize resources in much in the same summarizing way that journal article keywords describe publications. An initial draft of the ARMS standard is being prepared for circulation to the astrobiology community for feedback and revision.
    Keywords: Documentation and Information Science; Exobiology
    Type: ARC-E-DAA-TN70270 , Astrobiology Science Conference (AbSciCon 2019); Jun 24, 2019 - Jun 28, 2019; Bellevue, WA; United States
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2019-08-13
    Description: Lipid biomarkers for discrete microbial groups are a valuable tool for establishing links to ancient microbial ecosystems. Lipid biomarkers can establish organism source and function in contemporary microbial ecosystems (membrane lipids) and by analogy, potential relevance to the fossilized carbon skeletons (geolipids) extracted from ancient sedimentary rock. The Mars Exploration Rovers have provided clear evidence for an early wet Mars and the presence of hypersaline evaporitic basins. Ongoing work on an early Earth analog, the hypersaline benthic mats in Guerrero Negro, Baja California Sur, may provide clues to what may have evolved and flourished on an early wet Mars, if only for a short period. Cyanobacterial mats are a pertinent early Earth analog for consideration of evolutionary and microbial processes within the aerobic photosynthetic and adjacent anoxic layers. Fluctuations in physio-chemical parameters associated with spatial and temporal scales are expressed through vast microbial metabolic diversity. Our recent work hopes to establish the dynamic of archaeal diversity, particularly as it relates to methane production in this high sulfate environment, through the use of lipid biomarker and phylogenetic analyses. Archaeal 16s rRNA and mcrA gene assemblages, demonstrated distinct spatial separation over the 130 mm core of at least three distinct genera within the order Methanosarcinales, as well as an abundance of uncultured members of the Thermoplasmales and Crenarchaeota. Ether-bound lipid analysis identified abundant 0-alkyl and 0-isopranyl chains throughout the core, and the presence of sn-2 hydroxyarchaeol, a biomarker for methylotrophic methanogens. A unique ether isoprenoid chain, a C30:1 , possibly related to the geolipid squalane, a paleobiomarker associated with hypersaline environments, was most abundant within the oxic-anoxic transition zone.
    Keywords: Lunar and Planetary Science and Exploration
    Type: NAI Biennial Meeting of the NASA Astrobiology Institute; Apr 10, 2005 - Apr 14, 2005; Boulder, CO; United States
    Format: text
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