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NASA scientist reveals discovery of 60,000-year-old microbes in Mexican mine

Ninety percent of them have never been observed before now, she said.

NASA scientist reveals discovery of 60,000-year-old microbes in Mexican mine (Image for representational purposes only)

New Delhi: A Mexican mine had been hiding living micro-organisms trapped within crystals for as long as 60,000 years, which scientists have now discovered.

NASA scientist Penelope Boston of NASA's Astrobiology Institute in a presentation, that these strange ancient microbes have apparently evolved so they can survive on a diet of sulfite, manganese and copper oxide.

"This has profound effects on how we try to understand the evolutionary history of microbial life on this planet," she said.

The mine where the microbes were found is called the Naica mine, a working lead, zinc and silver mine in the northern Mexican state of Chihuahua and is famous for its huge crystals, some as long as 50 feet (15 meters).

The discovery has not yet been published in a peer-reviewed scientific journal, but it has led Boston to believe that living organisms may also have survived in the extreme environments of other planets and moons in our solar system.

She said about 100 different kinds of microorganisms – most of them bacteria – have been found locked in Naica crystals for periods ranging from 10,000 to 60,000 years.

Ninety percent of them have never been observed before now, she said.

The discovery of these ultra-hardy microorganisms has been a windfall for researchers but also a source of concern for astrobiologists thinking about bringing back samples collected on space missions in the solar system.

The extreme conditions under which these microbes have survived raises the possibility that dangerous extraterrestrial organisms could accidentally hitch a ride to Earth on a returning spaceship.

Astrobiologists also worry about the risk that Earth organisms could contaminate other planets in the course of missions to places like Mars, which has already been visited by several US robots.

NASA sterilizes its spacecraft and equipment before launching them into space. But there is always a risk that ultra-resistant microorganisms will survive.

"How do we ensure that life-detection missions are going to detect true Mars life or life from icy worlds rather than our life?" asked Boston.

The concerns are not new. During the Apollo missions of the 1960s and '70s, astronauts returning from the moon were quarantined.

The micro-organisms found in the Naica mine are not even the oldest discovered to date.

Several years ago scientists reported finding microbes in ice and salt that were up to 500,000 years old.

(With PTI inputs)

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