Rachel T. Schelble
University of New Mexico
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Featured researches published by Rachel T. Schelble.
Geomicrobiology Journal | 2005
Michael Spilde; D. Northup; Penelope J. Boston; Rachel T. Schelble; Kathleen E. Dano; Laura J. Crossey; Clifford N. Dahm
Abstract Unusual ferromanganese deposits are found in several caves in New Mexico. The deposits are enriched in iron and manganese by as much as three orders of magnitude over the bedrock, differing significantly in mineralogy and chemistry from bedrock-derived insoluble residue. The deposits contain metabolically active microbial communities. Enrichment cultures inoculated from the ferromanganese deposits produced manganese oxides that were initially amorphous but developed into crystalline minerals over an 8-month period and beyond; no such progression occurred in killed controls. Phylogenetic analyses of sequences from clone libraries constructed from culture DNA identified two genera known to oxidize manganese, but most clones represent previously unknown manganese oxidizers. We suggest that this community is breaking down the bedrock and accumulating iron and manganese oxides in an oligotrophic environment.
Astrobiology | 2001
Carlton C. Allen; Frances Westall; Rachel T. Schelble
Defining locations where conditions may have been favorable for life is a key objective for the exploration of Mars. Of prime importance are sites where conditions may have been favorable for the preservation of evidence of prebiotic or biotic processes. Areas displaying significant concentrations of the mineral hematite (alpha-Fe2O3), recently identified by thermal emission spectrometry, may have significance in the search for evidence of extraterrestrial life. Since iron oxides can form as aqueous mineral precipitates, the potential exists to preserve microscopic evidence of life in iron oxide-depositing ecosystems. Terrestrial hematite deposits proposed as possible analogs for hematite deposits on Mars include massive (banded) iron formations, iron oxide hydrothermal deposits, iron-rich laterites and ferricrete soils, and rock varnish. We report the potential for long-term preservation of microfossils by iron oxide mineralization in specimens of the approximately 2,100-Ma banded iron deposit of the Gunflint Formation, Canada. Scanning and analytical electron microscopy reveals micrometer-scale rods, spheres, and filaments consisting predominantly of iron and oxygen with minor carbon. We interpret these objects as microbial cells permineralized by an iron oxide, presumably hematite. The confirmation of ancient martian microbial life in hematite deposits will require the return of samples to terrestrial laboratories. A hematite-rich deposit composed of aqueous iron oxide precipitates may thus prove to be a prime site for future sample return.
Astrobiology | 2008
David Carlos Fernandez-Remolar; Felipe Gómez; Olga Prieto-Ballesteros; Rachel T. Schelble; Nuria Rodríguez; Ricardo Amils
Chemolithotrophic communities that colonize subsurface habitats have great relevance for the astrobiological exploration of our Solar System. We hypothesize that the chemical and thermal stabilization of an environment through microbial activity could make a given planetary region habitable. The MARTE project ground-truth drilling campaigns that sampled cryptic subsurface microbial communities in the basement of the Río Tinto headwaters have shown that acidic surficial habitats are the result of the microbial oxidation of pyritic ores. The oxidation process is exothermic and releases heat under both aerobic and anaerobic conditions. These microbial communities can maintain the subsurface habitat temperature through storage heat if the subsurface temperature does not exceed their maximum growth temperature. In the acidic solutions of the Río Tinto, ferric iron acts as an effective buffer for controlling water pH. Under anaerobic conditions, ferric iron is the oxidant used by microbes to decompose pyrite through the production of sulfate, ferrous iron, and protons. The integration between the physical and chemical processes mediated by microorganisms with those driven by the local geology and hydrology have led us to hypothesize that thermal and chemical regulation mechanisms exist in this environment and that these homeostatic mechanisms could play an essential role in creating habitable areas for other types of microorganisms. Therefore, searching for the physicochemical expression of extinct and extant homeostatic mechanisms through physical and chemical anomalies in the Mars crust (i.e., local thermal gradient or high concentration of unusual products such as ferric sulfates precipitated out from acidic solutions produced by hypothetical microbial communities) could be a first step in the search for biological traces of a putative extant or extinct Mars biosphere.
Environmental Microbiology | 2003
D. Northup; Susan M. Barns; Laura E. Yu; Michael Spilde; Rachel T. Schelble; Kathleen E. Dano; Laura J. Crossey; Cynthia A. Connolly; Penelope J. Boston; Donald O. Natvig; Clifford N. Dahm
Astrobiology | 2001
Penelope J. Boston; Michael Spilde; D. Northup; L.A. Melim; D.S. Soroka; L.G. Kleina; Kathleen H. Lavoie; L.D. Hose; L.M. Mallory; Clifford N. Dahm; Laura J. Crossey; Rachel T. Schelble
Archive | 2001
Rachel T. Schelble; Frances Westall; Carlton C. Allen; Adrian J. Brearley
Archive | 2001
Carlton C. Allen; Frances Westall; Rachel T. Schelble
Archive | 2003
Carlton C. Allen; Frances Westall; Teresa G. Longazo; Rachel T. Schelble; Luke W. Probst; Beverly E. Flood
Journal of Geophysical Research | 2003
Horton E. Newsom; Charles Barber; Trent M. Hare; Rachel T. Schelble; Van A. Sutherland; W. C. Feldman
Journal of Geophysical Research | 2003
Horton E. Newsom; Charles Barber; Trent M. Hare; Rachel T. Schelble; Van A. Sutherland; W. C. Feldman