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Bacteria found in 120,000-year-old ice
Pennsylvania State University researchers say the bacteria, found at a depth of nearly two miles, are among a type of ultra-small bacteria that can pass through microbiological filters, including those used to prepare ultra-purified water for dialysis.
The scientists said the discovery and subsequent studies of the microorganism's ability to persist in such a low-temperature, high-pressure, reduced-oxygen and nutrient-poor habitat might help reveal how life, in general, can exist in a variety of extreme environments on Earth and elsewhere.
Called Chryseobacterium greenlandensis, the species is related genetically to certain bacteria found in fish, marine mud and the roots of some plants, the scientists said, noting the organism is one of only about 10 scientifically described new species originating from polar ice and glaciers.
The discovery was presented this week in Boston during a meeting of the American Society for Microbiology.
Copyright 2008 by United Press International
This news arrived on: 06/05/2008
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Posted Comments:
06-13-2008 21:55
WAEL MOREICHEH wrote:
SCINCE-BACTERIA FOUND
THAT`S MIRACLE OF TRUE SCIENCE
UNFISHED
AND EARTH`S LIFE HAVE MAGIC FACT
WAEL MOREICHEH
POET
UNFISHED
AND EARTH`S LIFE HAVE MAGIC FACT
WAEL MOREICHEH
POET
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