AUG 27, 2024 3:45 PM PDT

From Abyssal Depths to Astrobiology: How Dark Oxygen Is Shaping Our Understanding of Life

What can deep ocean life teach us about finding life on other worlds? This is what a recent study published in Nature Geoscience hopes to address as an international team of researchers investigated how “dark oxygen”—which is oxygen produced without sunlight—is produced by deep sea creatures that reside within the Clarion-Clipperton Zone (CCZ) which is approximately 12,000 to 18,000 feet beneath the ocean’s surface and completely dark. This study holds the potential to help researchers better understand the conditions for life and where else we might find these conditions on worlds outside Earth.

For the study, the researchers used deep-sea chambers on the seafloor to measure changes in oxygen levels, which the team initially hypothesized was caused by the microbial life and other creatures living between the rocks, the latter of which are millions of years old. Along with thinking the local life produced the oxygen, the team also hypothesized the life consumed it, as well, resulting decreased oxygen levels. However, after 48 hours of collecting data, the researchers the oxygen levels increased, indicating that something else was producing oxygen at these extreme depths so far from the Sun.

The researchers found that these million-year-old rocks, called polymetallic nodules, were responsible for producing the oxygen, which the team has since dubbed dark oxygen since these ocean depths are so far down that no sunlight can reach it. With these incredible findings, the researchers postulate that dark oxygen could help explain why and how life can survive at such extreme depths, and potentially help astrobiologists find life on other world, including Jupiter’s moon, Europa, and Saturn’s moon, Enceladus.

“For the most part, we think of the deep sea as a place where decaying material falls down and animals eat the remnants. But this finding is recalibrating that dynamic,” said Dr. Jeffrey Marlow, who is an Assistant Professor of Biology at Boston University and a co-author on the study. “It helps us to see the deep ocean as a place of production, similar to what we have found with methane seeps and hydrothermal vents that create oases for marine animals and microbes. I think it’s a fun inversion of how we tend to think about the deep sea.”

What new discoveries about dark oxygen will researchers make in the coming years and decades? Only time will tell, and this is why we science!

As always, keep doing science & keep looking up!

Sources: Nature Geoscience, EurekAlert!, Boston University

Featured Image: Illustration of a robotic submersible on Jupiter's moon, Europa. (Credit: NASA/JPL)

About the Author
Master's (MA/MS/Other)
Laurence Tognetti is a six-year USAF Veteran who earned both a BSc and MSc from the School of Earth and Space Exploration at Arizona State University. Laurence is extremely passionate about outer space and science communication, and is the author of "Outer Solar System Moons: Your Personal 3D Journey".
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