The researchers
can't drill down to the pool that is home to the microbes because
the ice is too thick and too far back from the edge of the glacier,
but they think the pool is less than 3 miles (5 kilometers) across
and was formed about 1.5 million to 2 million years ago.
Genetic tests
suggest that the
microbes are similar to ones found in marine environments
today, which the researchers think are a remnant of a larger
population of microbes that once lived in a fjord or sea that was
cut off when sea levels fell and left the pool behind. The pool was
eventually capped off by the flowing glacier.
"It's a bit like
finding a forest that nobody has seen for 1.5 million years," said
study team member Ann Pearson of Harvard. "Intriguingly, the
species living there are similar to contemporary organisms, and yet
quite different — a result, no doubt, of having lived in such an
inhospitable environment for so long."
The water the
microbes dwell in averages a temperature of 14 degrees
Fahrenheit (minus 10 degrees Celsius), but doesn't freeze because
the water is three to four times saltier than the ocean.
This briny pond "is
a unique sort of time capsule from a period in Earth's history,"
Mikucki said. "I don't know of another environment quite like this
on Earth."
Learning more about
this unique environment could shed light on how microorganisms
might survive on icy planets in our solar system, such as below the
Martian ice caps or in the ice-covered ocean of
Jupiter's moon Europa.