Wednesday, June 1, 2011

Worms Discovered One Mile Under Earth's Surface

The current issue of Nature features an article in which two researchers claim to have found worms one mile under the surface of the earth.

They made their discovery while conducting exploratory experiments in a South African mine. One of the more amazing aspects of their research is that they conducted it so far beneath our collective feet. It makes one marvel at the engineering that can create safe conditions, with fresh air and light, so far from the earth's surface.

One also wonders how the pair of scientists set about discovering these multicellular creatures, called nematodes, whose existence in these extreme conditions had been the subject of speculation only a relatively short time ago.

The significance of the discovery was succinctly stated by Gaetan Borgonie (photo), one of the researchers. "It doesn't happen often," the Belgian nematologist said, "that you can redraw the boundaries of a biosphere on a planet."

2 comments:

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  2. As the blog administrator, I would like to explain why the post from "Anonymous" was removed.

    There are two reasons:
    1. The comment did not address the post's topic, which involved a significant scientific discovery.
    2. The comment did not cite any evidence for his/her assertion. After reading the comment, I did the leg work and got some information the poster did not bother to include. For something along the lines that "Anonymous" wrote, I prefer multiple, reliable sources for confirmation. That has not been the case, up to now, in the removed comment.

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