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Dive into the research topics where David Carlos Fernandez-Remolar is active.

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Featured researches published by David Carlos Fernandez-Remolar.


Nature | 2004

Inhibition of carbonate synthesis in acidic oceans on early Mars

Alberto G. Fairén; David Carlos Fernandez-Remolar; James M. Dohm; Victor R. Baker; Ricardo Amils

Several lines of evidence have recently reinforced the hypothesis that an ocean existed on early Mars. Carbonates are accordingly expected to have formed from oceanic sedimentation of carbon dioxide from the ancient martian atmosphere. But spectral imaging of the martian surface has revealed the presence of only a small amount of carbonate, widely distributed in the martian dust. Here we examine the feasibility of carbonate synthesis in ancient martian oceans using aqueous equilibrium calculations. We show that partial pressures of atmospheric carbon dioxide in the range 0.8–4 bar, in the presence of up to 13.5 mM sulphate and 0.8 mM iron in sea water, result in an acidic oceanic environment with a pH of less than 6.2. This precludes the formation of siderite, usually expected to be the first major carbonate mineral to precipitate. We conclude that extensive interaction between an atmosphere dominated by carbon dioxide and a lasting sulphate- and iron-enriched acidic ocean on early Mars is a plausible explanation for the observed absence of carbonates.


Hydrometallurgy | 2003

Geomicrobiology of the Tinto River, a model of interest for biohydrometallurgy

Elena González-Toril; Felipe Gómez; Nuria Rodríguez; David Carlos Fernandez-Remolar; J Zuluaga; I. Marín; Ricardo Amils

The Tinto River (Huelva, southwestern Spain) is an extreme environment with a constant acidic pH (mean 2.3), a high concentration of heavy metals and a remarkable level of microbial diversity (bacteria, archaea, photosynthetic and heterotrophic protists, yeast and filamentous fungi). The extreme conditions found in the river are the direct consequence of the active metabolism of chemolithotrophic microorganisms thriving in the rich polymetallic sulfides present in high concentrations in the Iberian Pyritic Belt. Primary production in the river is driven mainly by oxygenic photosynthesis (protists and cyanobacteria), although an important part is also due to the activity of chemolithotrophic prokaryotes. Conventional and molecular ecology techniques were used to study the microbial ecology of the Tinto system. The results of both methods agreed. Although sulfur metabolism plays an important role in the system, iron seems to be the key element in this habitat. Iron is not only an important substrate for the rich population of iron oxidizing prokaryotes, but also an electron acceptor for anaerobic respiration in the anoxic parts of the river. It is also responsible for the maintenance of a constant acidic pH (probably critical for biodiversity) and for radiation protection. Laminar iron stromatolitic formations can be found along the river. These structures are related to massive laminated bioinduced iron formations found at different elevations above the current river. The isotopic dating of these formations leads to the conclusion that the Tinto River corresponds to a natural system and not to an industrial, contaminated site. A geomicrobiological model of this habitat encompassing most of the geological, physical, chemical and biological variables is presented and its biohydrometallurgical implications discussed.


Geology | 2006

Interglacial clathrate destabilization on Mars: Possible contributing source of its atmospheric methane

Olga Prieto-Ballesteros; Jeffrey S. Kargel; Alberto G. Fairén; David Carlos Fernandez-Remolar; James M. Dohm; Ricardo Amils

The presence of methane has been recently detected in the martian atmosphere, suggesting a contemporary source such as volcanism or microbial activity. Here we show that methane may be released by the destabilization of methane clathrate hydrates, triggered by the interglacial climate change starting 0.4 Ma. Clathrate hydrates are nonstoichiometric crystalline compounds in which a water ice lattice forms cages that contain apolar gas molecules, such as methane [CH4· n H2O] and carbon dioxide [CO2· n H2O]. The loss of shallow ground ice eliminates confining pressure, initiating the destabilization of clathrate hydrates and the release of methane to the atmosphere. This alternative process does not restrict the methanes age to 430 yr (maximum residence time of methane gas in martian atmosphere), because clathrate hydrates can preserve (encage) methane of ancient origin for long time periods.


Astrobiology | 2008

Underground Habitats in the Río Tinto Basin: A Model for Subsurface Life Habitats on Mars

David Carlos Fernandez-Remolar; Olga Prieto-Ballesteros; Nuria Rodríguez; Felipe Gómez; Ricardo Amils; Javier Gómez-Elvira; Carol R. Stoker

A search for evidence of cryptic life in the subsurface region of a fractured Paleozoic volcanosedimentary deposit near the source waters of the Río Tinto River (Iberian pyrite belt, southwest Spain) was carried out by Mars Astrobiology Research and Technology Experiment (MARTE) project investigators in 2003 and 2004. This conventional deep-drilling experiment is referred to as the MARTE ground truth drilling project. Boreholes were drilled at three sites, and samples from extracted cores were analyzed with light microscopy, scanning electron microscopy-energy dispersive spectroscopy (SEM-EDS), X-ray diffraction (XRD), and Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy. Core leachates were analyzed with ion chromatography, and borehole fluids were analyzed with ion and gas chromatography. Key variables of the groundwater system (e.g., pO(2), pH, and salinity) exhibit huge ranges probably due to surficial oxygenation of overall reducing waters, physical mixing of waters, and biologically mediated water-rock interactions. Mineral distribution is mainly driven by the pH of subsurface solutions, which range from highly acidic to neutral. Borehole fluids contain dissolved gases such as CO(2), CH(4), and H(2). SEM-EDS analyses of core samples revealed evidence of microbes attacking pyrite. The Río Tinto alteration mechanisms may be similar to subsurface weathering of the martian crust and provide insights into the possible (bio)geochemical cycles that may have accompanied underground habitats in extensive early Mars volcanic regions and associated sulfide ores.


Astrobiology | 2011

A microbial oasis in the hypersaline Atacama subsurface discovered by a life detector chip: implications for the search for life on Mars.

Victor Parro; Graciela de Diego-Castilla; Mercedes Moreno-Paz; Yolanda Blanco; Patricia Cruz-Gil; J. A. Rodriguez-Manfredi; David Carlos Fernandez-Remolar; Felipe Gómez; Manuel J. Gómez; Luis Rivas; Cecilia Demergasso; Alex Echeverría; Viviana Urtuvia; Marta Ruiz-Bermejo; Miriam García-Villadangos; Marina Postigo; Mónica Sánchez-Román; G. Chong-Diaz; Javier Gómez-Elvira

The Atacama Desert has long been considered a good Mars analogue for testing instrumentation for planetary exploration, but very few data (if any) have been reported about the geomicrobiology of its salt-rich subsurface. We performed a Mars analogue drilling campaign next to the Salar Grande (Atacama, Chile) in July 2009, and several cores and powder samples from up to 5 m deep were analyzed in situ with LDChip300 (a Life Detector Chip containing 300 antibodies). Here, we show the discovery of a hypersaline subsurface microbial habitat associated with halite-, nitrate-, and perchlorate-containing salts at 2 m deep. LDChip300 detected bacteria, archaea, and other biological material (DNA, exopolysaccharides, some peptides) from the analysis of less than 0.5 g of ground core sample. The results were supported by oligonucleotide microarray hybridization in the field and finally confirmed by molecular phylogenetic analysis and direct visualization of microbial cells bound to halite crystals in the laboratory. Geochemical analyses revealed a habitat with abundant hygroscopic salts like halite (up to 260 g kg(-1)) and perchlorate (41.13 μg g(-1) maximum), which allow deliquescence events at low relative humidity. Thin liquid water films would permit microbes to proliferate by using detected organic acids like acetate (19.14 μg g(-1)) or formate (76.06 μg g(-1)) as electron donors, and sulfate (15875 μg g(-1)), nitrate (13490 μg g(-1)), or perchlorate as acceptors. Our results correlate with the discovery of similar hygroscopic salts and possible deliquescence processes on Mars, and open new search strategies for subsurface martian biota. The performance demonstrated by our LDChip300 validates this technology for planetary exploration, particularly for the search for life on Mars.


Geobiology | 2011

The preservation and degradation of filamentous bacteria and biomolecules within iron oxide deposits at Rio Tinto, Spain.

Louisa Preston; Jeremiah Shuster; David Carlos Fernandez-Remolar; Neil R. Banerjee; Gordon R. Osinski; Gordon Southam

One of the keys to understanding and identifying life on other planets is to study the preservation of organic compounds and their precursor micro-organisms on Earth. Rio Tinto in southwestern Spain is a well documented site of microbial preservation within iron sulphates and iron oxides over a period of 2.1 Ma. This study has investigated the preservation of filamentous iron oxidising bacteria and organics through optical microscopy, scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and Fourier transform infra-red (FTIR) spectroscopy, from laboratory cultures of natural samples to contemporary natural materials to million-year old river terraces. Up to 40% elemental carbon and >7% nitrogen has been identified within microbial filaments and cell clusters in all samples through SEM EDS analyses. FTIR spectroscopy identified C-H(x) absorption bands between 2960 and 2800 cm(-1), Amide I and II absorption bands at 1656 and 1535 cm(-1), respectively and functional group vibrations from within nucleic acids at 917, 1016 and 1124 cm(-1). Absorption bands tracing the diagenetic transformation of jarosite to goethite to hematite through the samples are also identified. This combination of mineralogy, microbial morphology and biomolecular evidence allows us to further understand how organic fossils are created and preserved in iron-rich environments, and ultimately will aid in the search for the earliest life on Earth and potential organics on Mars.


Astrobiology | 2008

The 2005 MARTE Robotic Drilling Experiment in Río Tinto, Spain: Objectives, Approach, and Results of a Simulated Mission to Search for Life in the Martian Subsurface

Carol R. Stoker; Howard Cannon; Stephen E. Dunagan; Lawrence G. Lemke; Brian Glass; David P. Miller; Javier Gómez-Elvira; Kiel Davis; Jhony Zavaleta; Alois Winterholler; Matt Roman; J. A. Rodriguez-Manfredi; Rosalba Bonaccorsi; Mary Sue Bell; Adrian J. Brown; Melissa Battler; Bin Chen; George Cooper; Mark R. Davidson; David Carlos Fernandez-Remolar; Eduardo Gonzales-Pastor; Jennifer Lynne Heldmann; J. Martínez-Frías; Victor Parro; Olga Prieto-Ballesteros; Brad Sutter; Andrew C. Schuerger; J. W. Schutt; Fernando Rull

The Mars Astrobiology Research and Technology Experiment (MARTE) simulated a robotic drilling mission to search for subsurface life on Mars. The drill site was on Peña de Hierro near the headwaters of the Río Tinto river (southwest Spain), on a deposit that includes massive sulfides and their gossanized remains that resemble some iron and sulfur minerals found on Mars. The mission used a fluidless, 10-axis, autonomous coring drill mounted on a simulated lander. Cores were faced; then instruments collected color wide-angle context images, color microscopic images, visible-near infrared point spectra, and (lower resolution) visible-near infrared hyperspectral images. Cores were then stored for further processing or ejected. A borehole inspection system collected panoramic imaging and Raman spectra of borehole walls. Life detection was performed on full cores with an adenosine triphosphate luciferin-luciferase bioluminescence assay and on crushed core sections with SOLID2, an antibody array-based instrument. Two remotely located science teams analyzed the remote sensing data and chose subsample locations. In 30 days of operation, the drill penetrated to 6 m and collected 21 cores. Biosignatures were detected in 12 of 15 samples analyzed by SOLID2. Science teams correctly interpreted the nature of the deposits drilled as compared to the ground truth. This experiment shows that drilling to search for subsurface life on Mars is technically feasible and scientifically rewarding.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Microbial mediated formation of Fe-carbonate minerals under extreme acidic conditions

Mónica Sánchez-Román; David Carlos Fernandez-Remolar; Ricardo Amils; Antonio Sánchez-Navas; Thomas Schmid; Patxi San Martín-Úriz; Nuria Rodríguez; Judith A. McKenzie; Crisogono Vasconcelos

Discovery of Fe-carbonate precipitation in Rio Tinto, a shallow river with very acidic waters, situated in Huelva, South-western Spain, adds a new dimension to our understanding of carbonate formation. Sediment samples from this low-pH system indicate that carbonates are formed in physico-chemical conditions ranging from acid to neutral pH. Evidence for microbial mediation is observed in secondary electron images (Fig. 1), which reveal rod-shaped bacteria embedded in the surface of siderite nanocrystals. The formation of carbonates in Rio Tinto is related to the microbial reduction of ferric iron coupled to the oxidation of organic compounds. Herein, we demonstrate for the first time, that Acidiphilium sp. PM, an iron-reducing bacterium isolated from Rio Tinto, mediates the precipitation of siderite (FeCO3) under acidic conditions and at a low temperature (30°C). We describe nucleation of siderite on nanoglobules in intimate association with the bacteria cell surface. This study has major implications for understanding carbonate formation on the ancient Earth or extraterrestrial planets.


Life | 2014

Río Tinto: A Geochemical and Mineralogical Terrestrial Analogue of Mars

Ricardo Amils; David Carlos Fernandez-Remolar

The geomicrobiological characterization of the water column and sediments of Río Tinto (Huelva, Southwestern Spain) have proven the importance of the iron and the sulfur cycles, not only in generating the extreme conditions of the habitat (low pH, high concentration of toxic heavy metals), but also in maintaining the high level of microbial diversity detected in the basin. It has been proven that the extreme acidic conditions of Río Tinto basin are not the product of 5000 years of mining activity in the area, but the consequence of an active underground bioreactor that obtains its energy from the massive sulfidic minerals existing in the Iberian Pyrite Belt. Two drilling projects, MARTE (Mars Astrobiology Research and Technology Experiment) (2003–2006) and IPBSL (Iberian Pyrite Belt Subsurface Life Detection) (2011–2015), were developed and carried out to provide evidence of subsurface microbial activity and the potential resources that support these activities. The reduced substrates and the oxidants that drive the system appear to come from the rock matrix. These resources need only groundwater to launch diverse microbial metabolisms. The similarities between the vast sulfate and iron oxide deposits on Mars and the main sulfide bioleaching products found in the Tinto basin have given Río Tinto the status of a geochemical and mineralogical Mars terrestrial analogue.


Astrobiology | 2011

Classification of Modern and Old Río Tinto Sedimentary Deposits Through the Biomolecular Record Using a Life Marker Biochip: Implications for Detecting Life on Mars

Victor Parro; David Carlos Fernandez-Remolar; J. A. Rodriguez-Manfredi; Patricia Cruz-Gil; Luis Rivas; Marta Ruiz-Bermejo; Mercedes Moreno-Paz; Miriam García-Villadangos; David Gómez-Ortiz; Yolanda Blanco-López; César Menor-Salván; Olga Prieto-Ballesteros; Javier Gómez-Elvira

The particular mineralogy formed in the acidic conditions of the Río Tinto has proven to be a first-order analogue for the acid-sulfate aqueous environments of Mars. Therefore, studies about the formation and preservation of biosignatures in the Río Tinto will provide insights into equivalent processes on Mars. We characterized the biomolecular patterns recorded in samples of modern and old fluvial sediments along a segment of the river by means of an antibody microarray containing more than 200 antibodies (LDCHIP200, for Life Detector Chip) against whole microorganisms, universal biomolecules, or environmental extracts. Samples containing 0.3-0.5 g of solid material were automatically analyzed in situ by the Signs Of LIfe Detector instrument (SOLID2), and the results were corroborated by extensive analysis in the laboratory. Positive antigen-antibody reactions indicated the presence of microbial strains or high-molecular-weight biopolymers that originated from them. The LDCHIP200 results were quantified and subjected to a multivariate analysis for immunoprofiling. We associated similar immunopatterns, and biomolecular markers, to samples with similar sedimentary age. Phyllosilicate-rich samples from modern fluvial sediments gave strong positive reactions with antibodies against bacteria of the genus Acidithiobacillus and against biochemical extracts from Río Tinto sediments and biofilms. These samples contained high amounts of sugars (mostly polysaccharides) with monosaccharides like glucose, rhamnose, fucose, and so on. By contrast, the older deposits, which are a mix of clastic sands and evaporites, showed only a few positives with LDCHIP200, consistent with lower protein and sugar content. We conclude that LDCHIP200 results can establish a correlation between microenvironments, diagenetic stages, and age with the biomarker profile associated with a sample. Our results would help in the search for putative martian biomarkers in acidic deposits with similar diagenetic maturity. Our LDCHIP200 and SOLID-like instruments may be excellent tools for the search for molecular biomarkers on Mars or other planets.

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Dive into the David Carlos Fernandez-Remolar's collaboration.

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Ricardo Amils

Instituto Nacional de Técnica Aeroespacial

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Felipe Gómez

Spanish National Research Council

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Olga Prieto-Ballesteros

Spanish National Research Council

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Nuria Rodríguez

Spanish National Research Council

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David Gómez-Ortiz

King Juan Carlos University

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Ricardo Amils

Instituto Nacional de Técnica Aeroespacial

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Victor Parro

Spanish National Research Council

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Elena González-Toril

Spanish National Research Council

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J. A. Rodriguez-Manfredi

Spanish National Research Council

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Javier Gómez-Elvira

Spanish National Research Council

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