Deep-sea sediments become apparently more hostile to life with increasing depth as temperature and pressure rise, and organic matter becomes increasingly recalcitrant. Demonstrations of high bacterial populations in deep sediments(1,2) may thus appear enigmatic. How, then, can the continued presence of active bacterial populations in deep sediments that are over 10 million years old be explained? Although volatile fatty acids, particularly acetate, are important intermediates in the anaerobic degradation of organic matter(3,4), their concentrations are kept very low in sediments (< 15 µM) by rapid bacterial consumption(5,6). Here we show that heating surface coastal marine sediments to simulate increasing temperature during burial produces ...
The spread of invasive species through ships' ballast water is considered as a major ecological thre...
Diffuse hydrothermal fluids often contain organic compounds such as hydrocarbons, lipids, and organi...
Bacterial gas is known from isotopic and chemical considerations to occur to thousands of metres de...
Marine sediments cover about 70% of the Earth’s surface and contain the largest reservoir of organic...
Previous studies of hot (\u3e80 degrees C) microbial ecosystems have primarily relied on the study o...
Earth's largest reactive carbon pool, marine sedimentary organic matter, becomes increasingly recalc...
Cold surface sediments host a seedbank of functionally diverse thermophilic bacteria. These thermoph...
Bacterial populations and pore water acetate concentrations were quantified at two sites in the sout...
Earth's largest reactive carbon pool, marine sedimentary organic matter, becomes increasingly recalc...
Acetate is a key intermediate in anaerobic mineralization of organic matter in marine sediments. Its...
Acetate is a key intermediate in anaerobic mineralization of organic matter in marine sediments. Its...
Acetate is a key intermediate in anaerobic mineralization of organic matter in marine sediments. Its...
Acetate is a key intermediate in anaerobic mineralization of organic matter in marine sediments. Its...
Acetate is a key intermediate in anaerobic mineralization of organic matter in marine sediments. Its...
There is abundant evidence that prokaryotic cells live deep beneath the sea floor. Pore water chemic...
The spread of invasive species through ships' ballast water is considered as a major ecological thre...
Diffuse hydrothermal fluids often contain organic compounds such as hydrocarbons, lipids, and organi...
Bacterial gas is known from isotopic and chemical considerations to occur to thousands of metres de...
Marine sediments cover about 70% of the Earth’s surface and contain the largest reservoir of organic...
Previous studies of hot (\u3e80 degrees C) microbial ecosystems have primarily relied on the study o...
Earth's largest reactive carbon pool, marine sedimentary organic matter, becomes increasingly recalc...
Cold surface sediments host a seedbank of functionally diverse thermophilic bacteria. These thermoph...
Bacterial populations and pore water acetate concentrations were quantified at two sites in the sout...
Earth's largest reactive carbon pool, marine sedimentary organic matter, becomes increasingly recalc...
Acetate is a key intermediate in anaerobic mineralization of organic matter in marine sediments. Its...
Acetate is a key intermediate in anaerobic mineralization of organic matter in marine sediments. Its...
Acetate is a key intermediate in anaerobic mineralization of organic matter in marine sediments. Its...
Acetate is a key intermediate in anaerobic mineralization of organic matter in marine sediments. Its...
Acetate is a key intermediate in anaerobic mineralization of organic matter in marine sediments. Its...
There is abundant evidence that prokaryotic cells live deep beneath the sea floor. Pore water chemic...
The spread of invasive species through ships' ballast water is considered as a major ecological thre...
Diffuse hydrothermal fluids often contain organic compounds such as hydrocarbons, lipids, and organi...
Bacterial gas is known from isotopic and chemical considerations to occur to thousands of metres de...