The
workshop, “New Horizons for International Investigations into Carbon
Cycling in the Deep Crustal Biosphere,” brought together scientists from
Canada, Germany, Belgium, Switzerland, Sweden, Finland, Russia, the
United States and South Africa to explore new approaches for retrieving
geochemical, isotopic, metagenomic, transcriptomic, metabolomic and
proteomic information from the deep subsurface biosphere where cell
concentrations are low and metabolic rates are very slow. The setting is
appropriate given the discovery of abiogenic hydrocarbons and
radiolytic H2 in the deep fractures of the Witwatersrand Basin, the
recent publication of the first subsurface metagenome from 2.8 km depth
at Mponeng Au mine and the recent establishment of an underground
laboratory at 3.8 km depth in Tau Tona Au mine for microbial studies.
Video #1 shows a descent down into the mine; accompanied by videos #2
and #3 which shows a hike to the field location. Staying cool is of
deep concern as shown in Video #4. Video #5 is of a filtering manifold,
called the "octopus," stuffed into a borehole with flowing water. Video
#6 is the burping hole at a depth of 3.7 km, where the water was
discovered to be very salty.
This workshop was sponsored by the Deep Carbon Observatory ( http://dco.gl.ciw.edu/ ) and hosted by the Department of Microbial, Biochemical and Food Biotechnology, University of the Free State.
Visit "Deep Carbon Observatory Carbon Cycling Workshop" for more information.