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Coleoptera and microbe biomass in Antarctic Dry Valley paleosols adjacent to the Inland Ice: Implications for Mars
Authors:William C. Mahaney  Kris M. Hart  Shane S. O'Reilly  Christopher C.R. Allen  James M. Dohm  Ronald G.V. Hancock  Brian P. Kelleher  Michael W. Milner
Affiliation:1. Quaternary Surveys, 26 Thornhill Ave., Thornhill, Ontario, Canada L4J 1J4;2. School of Chemical Sciences, Dublin City University, Glasnevin, Dublin 9, Ireland;3. The School of Biological Sciences, Queen''s University Belfast, Medical Biology Centre, Lisburn Road, Belfast BT9 5AG, N. Ireland, UK;4. Department of Hydrology and Water Resources, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ 85721, USA;5. Medical Physics and Applied Radiation Sciences, and Department of Anthropology, McMaster University Hamilton, Ontario, Canada L8S 4K1;6. MWM Consulting, 182 Gough Ave., Toronto, Ontario, Canada M4K 3P1
Abstract:Bulk paleosol samples collected from a Middle to Early Miocene moraine in the New Mountain area of the Dry Valleys, Antarctica, yielded Coleoptera exoskeletons and occasional endoskeletons showing considerable diagenetic effects along with several species of bacteria, all lodged in a dry-frozen but salt-rich horizon at shallow depth to the land surface. The till is at the older end of a chronologic sequence of glacial deposits, thought to have been deposited before the transition from wet-based to cold-based ice (~15 Ma), and hence, entirely weathered in contact with the subaerial atmosphere. It is possible, though not absolutely verifiable, that the skeletons date from this early stage of emplacement having undergone modifications whenever light snowmelt occurred or salt concentrations lowered the freezing temperature to maintain water as liquid. Correlation of the Coleoptera species with cultured bacteria in the sample and the likelihood of co-habitation with Beauveria bassiani found in two adjacent, although younger paleosols, leads to new questions about the antiquity of the Coleoptera and the source of N and glucose from chitinase derived from the insects. The skeletons in the 831 section may date close to the oldest preserved chitin (Oligocene) yet found on Earth. While harsh Martian conditions make it seemingly intolerable for complex, multicellular organisms such as insects to exist in the near-surface and subaerially, life within similar cold, dry paleosol microenvironments (Cryosols) of Antarctica point to life potential for the Red Planet, especially when considering the relatively diverse microbe (bacteria and fungi) population.
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