logo
How did life survive 'Snowball Earth'? In ponds, study suggests.

How did life survive 'Snowball Earth'? In ponds, study suggests.

Japan Times21-06-2025
Earth hasn't always been a hospitable place to live. During several ice ages, the planet's surface was almost completely frozen over, creating what has been dubbed "Snowball Earth."
Liquid water appears to be the most important ingredient for life on any planet, raising the question: how did anything survive such frosty, brutal times?
A group of scientists said Thursday that they had found an astonishing diversity of microorganisms in tiny pools of melted ice in Antarctica, suggesting that life could have ridden out Snowball Earth in similar ponds.
During the Cryogenian Period between 635 and 720 million years ago, the average global temperature did not rise above minus 50 degrees Celsius. The climate near the equator at the time resembled modern-day Antarctica.
Yet even in such extreme conditions, life found a way to keep evolving.
Fatima Husain, the lead author of a new study published in Nature Communications, said there was evidence of complex life forms "before and after the Cryogenian in the fossil record."
"There are multiple hypotheses regarding possible places life may have persisted," said Husain, a graduate student at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Perhaps it found shelter in patches of open ocean, or in deep-sea hydrothermal vents, or under vast sheets of ice.
The tiny melted ice pools that dotted the equator were another proposed refuge.
These ponds could have been oases for eukaryotes, complex organisms that eventually evolved into multicellular life forms that would rise to dominate Earth, including humans.
Melted ice ponds still exist today in Antarctica, at the edges of ice sheets.
In 2018, members of a New Zealand research team visited the McMurdo ice shelf in east Antarctica, home to several such pools, which are only a few meters wide and less a meter deep.
The bottom of the ponds are lined with a mat of microbes that have accumulated over the years to form slimy layers.
"These mats can be a few centimeters thick, colorful, and they can be very clearly layered," Husain said.
They are made up of single-celled organisms called cyanobacteria that are known to be able to survive extreme conditions.
But the researchers also found signs indicating there were eukaryotes such as algae or microscopic animals.
This suggests there was surprising diversity in the ponds, which appears to have been influenced by the amount of salt each contained.
"No two ponds were alike," Husain said. "We found diverse assemblages of eukaryotes from all the major groups in all the ponds studied."
"They demonstrate that these unique environments are capable of sheltering diverse assemblages of life, even in close proximity," she added.
This could have implications in the search for extraterrestrial life.
"Studies of life within these special environments on Earth can help inform our understanding of potential habitable environments on icy worlds, including icy moons in our Solar System," Husain said.
Saturn's moon Enceladus and Jupiter's Europa are covered in ice, but scientists increasingly suspect they could be home to simple forms of life, and several space missions have been launched to find out more about them.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

'Writing is thinking': Brain study prompts debate on ChatGPT use in education
'Writing is thinking': Brain study prompts debate on ChatGPT use in education

Japan Times

time03-07-2025

  • Japan Times

'Writing is thinking': Brain study prompts debate on ChatGPT use in education

When Jocelyn Leitzinger had her university students write about times in their lives when they had witnessed discrimination, she noticed that a woman named Sally was the victim in many of the stories. "It was very clear that ChatGPT had decided this is a common woman's name," said Leitzinger, who teaches an undergraduate class on business and society at the University of Illinois in Chicago. "They weren't even coming up with their own anecdotal stories about their own lives," she said. Leitzinger estimated that around half of her 180 students used ChatGPT inappropriately at some point last semester — including when writing about the ethics of artificial intelligence (AI), which she called both "ironic" and "mind-boggling." So she was not surprised by recent research that suggested students who use ChatGPT to write essays engage in less critical thinking. The preprint study, which has not been peer-reviewed, was shared widely online and clearly struck a chord with some frustrated educators. The team of MIT researchers behind the paper have received more than 3,000 emails from teachers of all stripes since it was published online last month, according to lead author Nataliya Kosmyna. 'Soulless' AI essays For the small study, 54 adult students from the greater Boston area were split into three groups. One group used ChatGPT to write 20-minute essays, one used a search engine, and the final group had to make do with only their brains. The researchers used EEG devices to measure the brain activity of the students, and two teachers marked the essays. The ChatGPT users scored significantly worse than the brain-only group on all levels. The EEG showed that different areas of their brains connected to each other less often. And more than 80% of the ChatGPT group could not quote anything from the essay they had just written, compared to around 10% of the other two groups. By the third session, the ChatGPT group appeared to be mostly focused on copying and pasting. The teachers said they could easily spot the "soulless" ChatGPT essays because they had good grammar and structure but lacked creativity, personality and insight. However Kosmyna pushed back against media reports claiming the paper showed that using ChatGPT made people lazier or more stupid. She pointed to the fourth session, when the brain-only group used ChatGPT to write their essay and displayed even higher levels of neural connectivity. Kosmyna emphasized it was too early to draw conclusions from the study's small sample size but called for more research into how AI tools could be used more carefully to help learning. Ashley Juavinett, a neuroscientist at the University of California San Diego who was not involved in the research, criticized some "off base" headlines that wrongly extrapolated from the preprint. "This paper does not contain enough evidence nor the methodological rigor to make any claims about the neural impact of using LLMs (large language models such as ChatGPT) on our brains," she said. Thinking outside the bot Leitzinger said the research reflected how she had seen student essays change since ChatGPT was released in 2022, as both spelling errors and authentic insight became less common. Sometimes students do not even change the font when they copy and paste from ChatGPT, she said. But Leitzinger called for empathy for students, saying they can get confused when the use of AI is being encouraged by universities in some classes but banned in others. The usefulness of new AI tools is sometimes compared to the introduction of calculators, which required educators to change their ways. But Leitzinger worried that students do not need to know anything about a subject before pasting their essay question into ChatGPT, skipping several important steps in the process of learning. A student at a British university in his early 20s who wanted to remain anonymous said he found ChatGPT was a useful tool for compiling lecture notes, searching the internet and generating ideas. "I think that using ChatGPT to write your work for you is not right because it's not what you're supposed to be at university for," he said. The problem goes beyond high school and university students. Academic journals are struggling to cope with a massive influx of AI-generated scientific papers. Book publishing is also not immune, with one startup planning to pump out 8,000 AI-written books a year. "Writing is thinking, thinking is writing, and when we eliminate that process, what does that mean for thinking?" Leitzinger asked.

How did life survive 'Snowball Earth'? In ponds, study suggests.
How did life survive 'Snowball Earth'? In ponds, study suggests.

Japan Times

time21-06-2025

  • Japan Times

How did life survive 'Snowball Earth'? In ponds, study suggests.

Earth hasn't always been a hospitable place to live. During several ice ages, the planet's surface was almost completely frozen over, creating what has been dubbed "Snowball Earth." Liquid water appears to be the most important ingredient for life on any planet, raising the question: how did anything survive such frosty, brutal times? A group of scientists said Thursday that they had found an astonishing diversity of microorganisms in tiny pools of melted ice in Antarctica, suggesting that life could have ridden out Snowball Earth in similar ponds. During the Cryogenian Period between 635 and 720 million years ago, the average global temperature did not rise above minus 50 degrees Celsius. The climate near the equator at the time resembled modern-day Antarctica. Yet even in such extreme conditions, life found a way to keep evolving. Fatima Husain, the lead author of a new study published in Nature Communications, said there was evidence of complex life forms "before and after the Cryogenian in the fossil record." "There are multiple hypotheses regarding possible places life may have persisted," said Husain, a graduate student at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Perhaps it found shelter in patches of open ocean, or in deep-sea hydrothermal vents, or under vast sheets of ice. The tiny melted ice pools that dotted the equator were another proposed refuge. These ponds could have been oases for eukaryotes, complex organisms that eventually evolved into multicellular life forms that would rise to dominate Earth, including humans. Melted ice ponds still exist today in Antarctica, at the edges of ice sheets. In 2018, members of a New Zealand research team visited the McMurdo ice shelf in east Antarctica, home to several such pools, which are only a few meters wide and less a meter deep. The bottom of the ponds are lined with a mat of microbes that have accumulated over the years to form slimy layers. "These mats can be a few centimeters thick, colorful, and they can be very clearly layered," Husain said. They are made up of single-celled organisms called cyanobacteria that are known to be able to survive extreme conditions. But the researchers also found signs indicating there were eukaryotes such as algae or microscopic animals. This suggests there was surprising diversity in the ponds, which appears to have been influenced by the amount of salt each contained. "No two ponds were alike," Husain said. "We found diverse assemblages of eukaryotes from all the major groups in all the ponds studied." "They demonstrate that these unique environments are capable of sheltering diverse assemblages of life, even in close proximity," she added. This could have implications in the search for extraterrestrial life. "Studies of life within these special environments on Earth can help inform our understanding of potential habitable environments on icy worlds, including icy moons in our Solar System," Husain said. Saturn's moon Enceladus and Jupiter's Europa are covered in ice, but scientists increasingly suspect they could be home to simple forms of life, and several space missions have been launched to find out more about them.

New nasal COVID vaccine offers high immunity in animal tests: Tokyo researchers
New nasal COVID vaccine offers high immunity in animal tests: Tokyo researchers

The Mainichi

time26-05-2025

  • The Mainichi

New nasal COVID vaccine offers high immunity in animal tests: Tokyo researchers

TOKYO -- A new type of coronavirus vaccine administered nasally has proven effective when tested on animals, researchers at the University of Tokyo Pandemic Preparedness, Infection and Advanced Research Center (UTOPIA) have announced. The research team including UTOPIA Director Yoshihiro Kawaoka claim that in addition to preventing serious illness, the nasal vaccine is expected to prevent the spread of infection by inhibiting growth of the virus in the nose. Since the global outbreak of COVID-19, vaccines using messenger RNA (mRNA), which contains genetic information, have been developed and put into widespread use for inoculations. However, there has been demand for new types of vaccines that boost immunity in areas where infection occurs, such as the upper respiratory tract, and which inhibit the spread of the virus even if infection occurs. The team created viruses using genetic information from which the parts of the coronavirus' genes needed to assemble viral particles were removed. Inside human and other cells, these engineered viruses create proteins needed for acquiring immunity. Because they cannot build the viral structure or core components themselves, there is no risk of them multiplying and spreading. When a vaccine with the artificial virus was administered nasally to mice, immunity was achieved on the mucous membranes of their nasal cavity and lungs. The new type reportedly achieves particularly wide immunity coverage in the lungs when compared to mRNA vaccines. Next, when a group of eight hamsters treated with the nasal vaccine was infected with the delta variant of the coronavirus and omicron's XBB subvariant, neither of these virus variants propagated in the lungs. The nasal cavities of around half of the hamsters were reportedly free of viral growth on the third day after infection, and even in the other half, the amount of growth was significantly suppressed, disappearing by the sixth day. Kawaoka commented, "The nasal vaccine is effective for respiratory tract infections and is thought to be effective in preventing the spread of infection. Unlike mRNA vaccines, it has the advantage of providing immunity similar to that acquired through actual viral infection." The results were published in the U.K. science journal Nature Communications.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store