Microbial Residents of the Atlantis Massif’s Shallow Serpentinite Subsurface
Shahrzad Motamedi, Beth N. Orcutt, Gretchen L. Früh‐Green, Katrina I. Twing, H. Lizethe Pendleton, William J. Brazelton
Abstract
The International Ocean Discovery Program Expedition 357-"Serpentinization and Life"-utilized seabed drills to collect rocks from the oceanic crust. The recovered rock cores represent the shallow serpentinite subsurface of the Atlantis Massif, where reactions between uplifted mantle rocks and water, collectively known as serpentinization, produce environmental conditions that can stimulate biological activity and are thought to be analogous to environments that were prevalent on the early Earth and perhaps other planets. The methodology and results of this project have implications for life detection experiments, including sample return missions, and provide a window into the diversity of microbial communities inhabiting subseafloor serpentinites.