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Lake Dive in Search of Ancient Life

ºÙºÙÊÓƵ graduate student Bekah Shepard will be piloting a mini-submersible into the depths of Pavilion Lake, British Columbia, this month as part of an expedition to map strange life forms that could give clues to the history of life on Earth and other planets.

Led by Darlene Lim from NASA's Ames Research Center and researchers from McMaster University and the University of British Columbia, the team will use one-person "Deepworker" submersibles supplied by Nuytco Inc. to map and sample microbialites in the lake. These formations of living microbes and minerals are thought to be similar to some of the earliest forms of life on Earth.

"What's unique about Pavilion Lake is that there is such a diverse set of microbialite morphologies," Shepard said. Also part of the team is ºÙºÙÊÓƵ undergraduate Natalie Stork.

Shepard and Stork have been studying for their doctorates with ºÙºÙÊÓƵ geology professor Dawn Sumner, who studies ancient forms of life on Earth and how their billion-year-old fossils can be distinguished from purely mineral traces. The same knowledge could be applied to look for evidence of life on other planets, notably Mars.

The researchers have previously explored the lake by scuba diving and with remote-operated vehicles. The manned submersibles will allow them to reach the deepest parts of the lake -- about 180 feet -- collect samples, and map microbialite colonies.

Joining the expedition will be Canadian astronaut Dave Williams, now a professor of surgery at McMaster University, and NASA astronaut Michael Gernhardt.

The submersible dives will run from June 23 to July 3, followed by another week of scuba diving.

Media Resources

Andy Fell, Research news (emphasis: biological and physical sciences, and engineering), 530-752-4533, ahfell@ucdavis.edu

Bekah Shepard, Geology, rnshepard@ucdavis.edu

Patricia Montgomery, NASA Ames Research Center, (650) 604-4792, patricia.h.montgomery@nasa.gov

Dawn Sumner, Geology, (530) 752 5353, sumner@geology.ucdavis.edu

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