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Location: Ancient
sea salt beneath Carlsbad, New Mexico, USA.
Facts: Bacterial spores
were excavated from a layer of ancient sea salt that was
dated using radiometric methods. Scientists successfully
'revived' these specimens in a laboratory after lying in
a dormant state of suspended animation for an estimated
250 million years, the age of the surrounding matrix.
The Scientists Who Study
this Cool Stuff?
Biologists, Microbiologists.
Links:
Debate
over age of ancient bacteria
New
technology breakthrough allows study of ancient bacteria
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Today's
Winner is...
These
are specimens of the 250-million
year old bacteria, B. permians. If it can be verified that these
were re-animated from a long, long period of suspended animation
then they hold the record for world's oldest living organism. |
Of all the world records profiled
on Extreme Science this one has proved to be the most elusive and
tricky to keep updated. It seems there are a number of different organisms
that hold the record for the "longest lived" and their exact
ages are still under investigation. In fact, the only thing we can
report for certain is that the records listed here will probably be
upstaged by a new discovery in the near future. Below is a listing
of what is currently in the literature as some of the oldest organisms
still living today:
October, 1999; 250-million-year-old
bacteria were found in ancient sea salt beneath Carlsbad, New Mexico.
The microscopic organisms were revived in a laboratory after being
in 'suspended animation', encased in a hard-shelled spore, for an
estimated 250 million years. The species has not been identified,
but is referred to as strain 2-9-3, or B. permians.
May, 1995; 40-million-year-old
bacteria (Bacillus sphaericus) were found in the stomach of
a bee encased in amber. These bacteria were also found in a state
of suspended animation and were re-animated in a laboratory.
1997; King's Holly (Lomatia
tasmanica) - found in the rainforests of Tasmania. Scientists
estimated the age of the plant using a nearby fossil of an identical
plant. It was found to be over 43,000 years old! The
plants appear to be sterile - incapable of producing flowers and viable
seeds. Lomatia is triploid, that
is, it has three sets of chromosomes instead of two. Because of this
it is unable to sexually reproduce. The clonal thickets reproduce
vegetatively by root suckering. Fossil leaves found in a late Pleistocene
deposit may be genetically identical to present-day plants. The plant
is a rare freak of nature whose origins
and age are as yet unknown.
August, 1999; Box Huckleberry
(Gaylussacia brachycera) - researchers in Pennsylvania have
discovered a living plant that is a remnant of the last Ice Age. Using
the known rate of growth if this self-sterile plant, they estimated
that this 1/4-acre colony is over 13,000 years old.
Researchers are still trying to verify the growth rate to determine
is that age is an accurate measure.
March, 2004; Eucalyptus
recurva. Also known as "Mongarlowe Mallee" or "Ice
Age Gum" it is the rarest Eucalypt in Australia or the world,
and is known from only 5 individual specimens. Scientists in Australia
are undertaking analyses to determine the exact age of one specimen
that is estimated to be 13,000 years old. This aging
method also relies on determining the plant's growth rate. Scientists
are stilly verifying the growth and performing genetic analyses of
neighboring specimens to determine if they are from the same organism.
April, 1980; Creosote bush
(Larrea tridentata). Scientists discovered a giant, and very
ancient clone of the creosote bush in the Mojave Desert in California
they estimated to be between 11,000 and 12,000 years old.
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