| What's it all about?
Geomicrobial sightings |
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Geomicrobiology (sometimes the broader term "geobiology" is used) is the interdisciplinary study of the interactions of (micro)organisms and materials in their environments. Geomicrobiology can be viewed as being closely related to (or another term for) microbial ecology and environmental microbiology, and aspects of industrial or applied microbiology - and even astro- or exobiology, but each has a little different emphasis.
It is interesting to read discussion of the
newly
rekindled interest in geobiology and geomicrobiology, as summarized in
the December 2001 American Academy of Microbiology (AAM)
Report: "Geobiology:
Exploring the Interface Between the Biosphere and the Geosphere."
This report summarizes the discussions of a colloquium of distinguished
scientists held in late 2000 in Tucson, Arizona, and we suggest you
download and read it.
If you follow the history of microbiology, the science really had its beginnings in geomicrobiology (things found in rain barrels and pipes). This aspect of microbiology was very strong through the early 20th Century, after which, medical/clinical microbiology entirely eclipsed the older subdiscipline, and compartmentalization of knowledge was the order of the day. However, some people have hung on ever since. The definitive textbook on the subject is Geomicrobiology, 3rd ed. 1995, H.L. Ehrlich, Marcel Dekker (pricey, but available from Amazon.com in 5-6 weeks). A journal, Geomicrobiology Journal (Taylor & Francis) has persisted since the late 1980s, and others addressing geobiology and the related discipline of astrobiology are appearing.
Recently, a new wave of scholarly interest, fueled largely by climate and environmental issues, rekindled interest in the ecology of disease, and exobiology possibilities in our Solar System (and aided by a renewed spirit of collaboration in science), has resulted in a recent crop of Ph.D.'s and newly established geomicrobiology labs, programs and courses around the U.S. and internationally. Below are some links to some of the more interesting web resources on terrestrial geomicrobiology (there's more going on, but other sites are more about who's there and what they're going to do).
Geomicrobiological Processes as Art
Just some sightings of interesting geomicrobiological happenings (more as we add them):
Yellow springs, near Yellow Springs, Ohio, formed by iron-precipitating microflora (water from limestone) |
A cascade water
treatment system removing minerals from
thermal water in
Colorado |
We here at Ground Water Science are not new
to
geomicrobiology, having practiced aspects of it for over 20
years. Stu Smith,
like
many now pursuing geomicrobiology, was a kid who never decided whether
to
1) look at the rock in the creek, or 2) what grew on the rock, so he does both. While
with
the National Water Well (now Ground Water) Association, he studied iron
related
bacteria with O.H. Tuovinen
at The Ohio State University (a real "geomicrobiologist" from Finland, a hotbed of 1970s geomicrobiology, when it wasn't
"cool"
yet), and later
collaborated
with him and Laura Tuhela-Reuning
(now at Ohio Wesleyan University) on the first modern study
(for
AWWA Research Foundation) of practical environmental microbiology
methods
that water plant operators can use to monitor the geomicrobiology of
ground
water systems - to keep them working!
That's our focus and strength - not devoting our professional lives to narrow subjects or chasing research grants, but coordinating information (and collaborative teams) to solve real-life problems. And we're still at it (putting on hardhats and coordinating hydrogeology, microbiology, chemistry, hydraulics, drilling, material performance - and wielding pipe wrenches and multimeters) on projects such as these:
Conducting test
drilling to confirm and characterize
the nature of contamination from ethanol spills, the effect on aquifer
water
quality, and plans for management of the problem for a utility in the
Mississippi
River Valley, mobilizing multiple skills in a remote (from us)
location,
and assembling a multidisciplinary team of expertise, including
Geoprobe
sampling, PLFA analysis and more mundane physical-chemical analysis -
well
under budget.For your edification - some (not all of the) content-rich geomicrobiology-related links:
And here at Ground Water Science:
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