Bizarre microbes found in a lake in Antarctica have provided key insights into how life on other planets may have developed.
A study published by the Italian National Research Council published in Communications Earth & Environment, a peer-reviewed journal, suggests, in contrast to what was previous believed, Lake Enigma, located in Antarctica’s Victoria Land, does in fact contain liquid water.
The study was led by scientists from the Institute of Polar Sciences of the Italian National Research Council (CNR-ISP).
The team includes prominent researchers like Dr Maurizio Azzaro and Dr Angelina Lo Giudice, who specialise in microbial ecology and polar environments.
Scientists used advanced ground-penetrating radar and drilled through the ice during an Italian Antarctic expedition in 2019-2020 to confirm the existence of liquid water.
The lake’s isolation from external elements, including extreme cold and lack of sunlight, has created a unique, closed microbial environment.
The study also uncovered “ultrasmall” bacteria from the superphylum Patescibacteria, which are known for their minimal cellular activity but play critical roles in the lake’s ecosystem.
Their discovery of microscopic lifeforms has exciting implications for both Earth sciences and astrobiology.
This isolated environment, locked under ice for around 20,000 years, contains liquid water and hosts extremophiles – microorganisms capable of surviving extreme cold, low nutrients and high pressure.
Such microbes adapt through unique biochemical mechanisms, such as specialised proteins and membrane structures, enabling them to thrive where most life forms cannot.
Their discovery underscores the resilience of life and broadens the understanding of where it might exist. It highlights water as a key solvent for life, not only on Earth but potentially on other icy worlds like Europa and Enceladus.
The chemical and energy processes in Lake Enigma provide a parallel for studying similar extraterrestrial environments where liquid water is present beneath icy crusts.
The Galilean moon of Europa for example is thought to have a sizeable lake beneath its frozen surface.
NASA’s Europa Clipper mission, launched in October, is designed to follow up on evidence for a subsurface ocean underneath Europa’s ice crust, found using the Galileo spacecraft which orbited Jupiter from 1995 to 2003.
The surface of the Saturnian moon of Enceladus is mostly covered in fresh ice, making it one of the most reflective bodies in the Solar System.
It has geyser-like volcanoes that spew jets of ice particles, water vapour and organic chemicals.
Scientists believe it contains carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, oxygen, and phosphorus – in other words, the building blocks of life.