HomeAstronomyArctic vent site surprise could help the search for life

Arctic vent site surprise could help the search for life

New research shows that a remote place on Earth has submarine activity akin to that on Saturn’s icy moon Enceladus. The finding offers a new opportunity that can help scientists prepare for future space missions that will explore the possibility of life on worlds with subsurface oceans.

An international team of researchers discovered the hydrothermal vent site, called Aurora, in the Arctic in 2014 and revisited it in 2019. Locked roughly 2.5 miles (4 kilometers) under permanent ice cover, Aurora is among the deepest hydrothermal fields on Earth. So, it is not surprising that researchers found it to be a natural, pristine laboratory to study the area’s geology and its ability to host hydrothermal vents for long periods of time — an important aspect for life to begin in the depths of ice-trapped oceans.

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