eWoss Home
  
Make eWoss Your Homepage
eWoss News
Breaking News Headlines
Top News Stories
U.S. National News
World News
Sports News
Business News
Entertainment News
Tech Industry News
Political News
Science News
Health News
Weird News

Science News

Old Cellulose Found in NM Salt Crystals

Tuesday, April 15, 2008 4:34:13 PM
By MATT MYGATT

This photo provided by Jack Griffith, a professor of microbiology and immunology at the University of North Carolina School of Medicine, shows him underground in front of a salt wall as he holds chunks of extracted salt samples at the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant near Carlsbad, N.M. in December 2006.  Griffith and his team found cellulose dating back 253 million years _ along with some possible ancient DNA _ has been found in salt crystals from the underground nuclear waste dump. The crystals were taken from newly mined areas 2,000 feet below WIPP's desert surface last fall and a couple of years ago, Griffith said Wednesday, April 9, 2008. Griffith said he thinks looking for cellulose in salt deposits is a good way to go searching for life on other planets. (AP Photo/Courtesy of Jack Griffith)ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) - Cellulose dating back 253 million years — along with some possible ancient DNA — has been found in salt crystals from an underground nuclear waste dump in southern New Mexico.

"We did see some ancient DNA in the salt, but not a lot, and we have to continue experiments to try to verify that it is ancient DNA," said Jack D. Griffith, a professor of microbiology and immunology at the University of North Carolina School of Medicine.

The cellulose — the same microscopic stuff in wood or cotton — was in water locked in tiny cubes of clear and reddish-brown salt crystals at the federal government's Waste Isolation Pilot Plant near Carlsbad.

The crystals were taken from newly mined areas 2,000 feet below WIPP's desert surface last fall and a couple of years ago, Griffith said last week.

"We found one in a wall that was a couple of feet across, almost looking like into a huge frozen block of ice. The others were found in crystal that is smaller and finer and in jumbles with sulfur or clay deposits," he said.

The research by Griffith and four co-authors was published in the April issue of the journal Astrobiology.

Cellulose fibers are shown under a microscope in June 2007 in this photo provided by Jack Griffith, professor of microbiology and immunology at the University of North Carolina School of Medicine. Griffith and his team found cellulose dating back 253 million years _ along with some possible ancient DNA _ in salt crystals from the underground nuclear waste dump, Waste Isolation Pilot Plant, near Carlsbad, N.M. The crystals were taken from newly mined areas 2,000 feet below WIPP's desert surface last fall and a couple of years ago, Griffith said Wednesday, April 9, 2008.  Griffith said he thinks looking for cellulose in salt deposits is a good way to go searching for life on other planets. (AP Photo/Courtesy of Jack Griffith)Griffith said he thinks looking for cellulose in salt deposits is a good way to go searching for life on other planets because cellulose is tough.

He and his colleagues used a tiny drill — about the width of a cat's whisker — to bore into the water-bearing cubes to retrieve drops water as large as one from a standard eyedropper.

"These inclusions contain saturated salt water that is basically a time capsule that is a quarter-of-a-billion years old," Griffith said.

Evaporation cycles from a Permian sea created a 2,000-foot-thick bed of salt.

This photo provided by Jack Griffith, a professor of microbiology and immunology at the University of North Carolina School of Medicine, shows Waste Isolation Pilot Plant staff member Sam Dominguez using a core drill to extract salt crystal samples from a salt wall at the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant near Carlsbad, N.M. in December 2006. Griffith and his team found cellulose dating back 253 million years _ along with some possible ancient DNA _ in salt crystals from the underground nuclear waste dump. The crystals were taken from newly mined areas 2,000 feet below WIPP's desert surface last fall and a couple of years ago, Griffith said Wednesday, April 9, 2008. Griffith said he thinks looking for cellulose in salt deposits is a good way to go searching for life on other planets. (AP pPhoto/Courtesy of Jack Griffith)The water drops were placed in a centrifuge and the remaining pellets were examined with an electron microscope.

"We were thinking we might see bacteria or bacteria viruses or DNA," Griffith said.

"But there were all these mats of this fibrous stuff," which further tests and research found to be cellulose, he said.

The cellulose looks like a web of tangled angel hair pasta. The fibers are about twice the diameter of a DNA molecule.

The discovery of the cellulose, probably remnants of filamentous algae, is significant and exciting, said Karl Niklas, a professor at Cornell University's Department of Plant Biology.

"The cell walls were preserved, so they (Griffith's team) have native cellulose," Niklas said.

The ancient cellulose was not fossilized — a process in which biological material is replaced by minerals, making a rock.

Cellulose is "a fairly simple structure. And it's probably a fairly simple step for the earliest life forms a couple of billion years ago to start stringing these things together one after another," Griffith said.

"Bacterial colonies could use it to synthesize mats. They could coat themselves with it for protection," he said.

"Not only is it (cellulose) extremely stable, but it's also by far the single most abundant molecule on the planet," Griffith said.

Plants, algae and bacteria generate about 100 gigatons of cellulose a year, he said.

"We're kind of living in a soup of this stuff," Griffith said.

Griffith and his students have talked about going into older salt beds — such as an almost 400 million-year-old deposit under Detroit — to look for cellulose.

"The joke has been that this is the first time students want to be sent to the salt mines," he said.


Other Science News

Gustav headed for current that fuels big storms 2:57PM CT
Lifestyles of Brazil's ancient urbanites revealed Aug 28 2008 3:56PM CT
Arctic sea ice drops to 2nd lowest level on record Aug 27 2008 6:23PM CT
Purdue reprimands fusion scientist for misconduct Aug 27 2008 6:11PM CT
Fay leaves behind lots of water for Fla. lake Aug 27 2008 5:14PM CT
Cells change identity in promising breakthrough Aug 27 2008 12:09PM CT
Arctic sea ice melts to second worst on record Aug 27 2008 10:35AM CT
Mars rover leaving crater after yearlong probe Aug 26 2008 5:32PM CT
Cancer cluster confirmed in northeast Pennsylvania Aug 25 2008 9:11PM CT
Cows seem to know which way is north Aug 25 2008 4:02PM CT

  

© 2004-2007 eWoss.com. All trademarks are the property of their respective owners. All Rights Reserved.
Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.