John Bluck                                      April 3, 2002
NASA Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, Calif.
Phone: 650/604-5026 or 604-9000
E-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

RELEASE: 02-37AR

HYDROGEN-FED BACTERIA MAY EXIST BEYOND EARTH

Primitive bacteria exist in huge numbers deep in the Earth, living on 
hydrogen gas produced in rocks, a NASA scientist reports in the 
spring issue of the journal Astrobiology.

Recent studies suggest that the mass of bacteria existing below 
ground may be larger than the mass of all living things at the 
Earth's surface, according to recent studies cited by the paper's 
lead author, Friedemann Freund, who works at NASA Ames Research 
Center in California's Silicon Valley. Similar hydrogen-consuming 
microbes may some day be discovered on Mars, raising new prospects 
for the possible existence of life beyond Earth, Freund added.

"The hydrogen that could feed bacteria in the depth of the Earth 
comes from a subtle chemical reaction that occurs within rocks that 
were once hot or even molten. In the top 20 kilometers (12.4 miles) 
of Earth's crust," Freund said, "the conditions are right to produce 
a nearly inexhaustible supply of hydrogen. In the top 5 to10 
kilometers (about 3 to 6 miles) all fissures and cracks in the rocks 
are probably filled with water. Hydrogen molecules will seep out of 
the mineral grains, enter the intergranular space and saturate the 
water. Microorganisms that live in these water films can be expected 
to use this hydrogen as their vital energy source."

Many of the microorganisms in the 'deep biosphere' do not live off 
the sunlight-derived energy that green plants trap during 
photosynthesis, but live on chemically derived energy sources such as 
hydrogen, according to Freund. "If deep microbial communities are to 
thrive over long periods of time, they need a steady supply of 
hydrogen," he said.

It has long been known that hydrogen gas is produced when water 
reaches freshly formed cracks in many common rocks, but Freund's 
paper describes a different hydrogen-producing reaction that occurs 
inside the minerals that make up such rocks. This reaction does not 
require rocks to crack - a necessarily episodic event. Instead, it 
occurs in the entire rock volume during its gradual cooling as 
continents slowly age over millions of years. Because the Earth's 
crust contains a huge quantity of rock, even a small amount of 
hydrogen produced in each small section of rock results in a large 
volume of gas.

To understand the details of this hydrogen-producing reaction, Freund 
said, requires some insight into the structure of minerals where 
silicon, oxygen and metals have combined to form a dense pack of 
atoms and ions. When these minerals crystallize at high temperatures, 
water is always present, and some water molecules are trapped in the 
atomic structure of the minerals, said Freund. These water molecules 
are ripped apart and change into hydroxyl anions, each of which is 
negatively charged and has one oxygen ion with a proton attached.

"During cooling, at temperatures below 400 to 500 degrees C (752 to 
932 degrees F), a strange reaction takes place. Pairs of these 
hydroxyl anions rearrange their electrons in such a way that hydrogen 
gas molecules are formed," Freund said.

What is unusual and still not fully understood, said Freund, is that 
the electrons needed to make the hydrogen molecules are taken away 
from negatively charged oxygen anions. "Suddenly, some oxygen anions, 
which everybody thought only existed in a doubly charged negative 
state, convert to singly charged negative ions," he said. "These 
single negative oxygen anions join in pairs. In this form, they are 
innocuous and can stay inactive over geological times." 

The hydrogen molecules, however, wander around inside the mineral 
structure and can squeeze into the narrow spaces between the mineral 
grains. If the intergranular space is filled with water, the hydrogen 
molecules will dissolve in the water. If microbes live in the 
intergranular water films, one can imagine, said Freund, that these 
bacteria extract the dissolved hydrogen from the water and use this 
hydrogen as an energy source, not unlike fish that extract oxygen 
dissolved in the water of rivers, lakes and the sea to respire.

"What is potentially important," Freund said, "is that, if and when 
microorganisms in the deep underground use this hydrogen dissolved in 
the intergranular water films, the rocks around them will replenish 
the hydrogen supply - indefinitely, over eons of time."

The paper by Freund and his coworkers also may help answer 
non-biological questions related to the commercial viability of 
tapping hydrogen reserves deep in the rocks and to questions of mine 
safety. For example, sometimes, during mining and drilling 
operations, enough hydrogen seeps out of wall rocks that explosive 
gas mixtures can be produced, according to some reports.

"Since old, old times, the mining industry has had its share of mine 
explosions in which hydrogen played a role," Freund said, "but 
hydrogen gas could also be used as an energy source and fuel in 
today's or tomorrow's society. For years, pipelines have been 
distributing hydrogen gas between different industrial partners in 
the Ruhr Valley in Germany, and the experts say it can be handled 
about as safely as natural gas."

-end-


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