'Extreme Science' Goes In Search Of The 'Worms From Hell' : 13.7: Cosmos And Culture : NPR - http://www.npr.org/blogs...
"Often in the reporting about science, the adventure, the risk and the physical difficulty of the research gets shunted aside and ignored. Science tends to be seen as the work of people who don't willingly expose themselves to physical hardship and danger. Exceptions to this perception, including astronauts and heroic researchers such as Jonas Salk (who famously took an early dose of the polio vaccine, along with his wife and children, to hopefully demonstrate its safety), are few and far between. This came to mind with reporting about a recent and surprising discovery: that complex life forms, in this case nematodes or "worms from hell," live a mile and more below the surface of the Earth." - Jenny
"The research, led by Belgian nematodologist Gaetan Borgonie and Princeton geo-microbiologist Tullis Onstott, took place in the deep gold and platinum mines of South Africa — the deepest cuts ever made into the planet by man. Along with their colleagues, mostly from the University of the Free State in Bloemfontein, they descended into the deep mines dozens, even scores of times — withstanding steamy temperatures that are at times well above 100 degrees F. It's an environment where internal body temperatures can spike and hazy hallucinations are common. The nematodes and microbes they've found (that were rightly deemed a significant addition to our knowledge of the world and possibly of other worlds) came out of boreholes where the water temperature topped 130 degrees." - Jenny
"What is important, and will be lasting about this work, is the discovery of complex life at depths where it had never been found before (and where even microbial life was considered impossible 15 years ago.) The discovery not only broadens our understanding of the subterranean world where, after all, more than half the Earth's biomass makes its living. It also suggests that if life survives beneath the frigid, irradiated surface of Mars, for instance, it might not be solely of the single-cell variety. The work is also a reminder that the men and women of science willingly and regularly descend into ocean trenches and deep mines, fly into smoldering volcanoes and endure punishing Antarctic cold and Atacama Desert heat to collect the information that is telling us so much that is new and remarkable to man about the world we live in. Extreme science is how I think of it, and it's definitely not for the faint of heart." - Jenny
ughh. - edythe
That sounds secksi, Glen! :P - Jenny