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Deep-ocean floor produces its own ‘dark oxygen’

New study finds metallic minerals act as geobatteries to split water

EMBARGOED UNTIL 11 A.M. EDT (U.S.) ON MONDAY, JULY 22, 2024

  • Researchers discover oxygen production more than 13,000 feet below the ocean’s surface
  • Discovery challenges long-held assumptions that only photosynthetic organisms generate Earth’s oxygen
  • Minerals at the abyssal seafloor may act like geobatteries to produce oxygen in a process that does not require sunlight
  • This process produces enough oxygen to support sea life in complete darkness
  • Researcher: This puts a ‘major asterisk onto strategies for sea-floor mining’

EVANSTON, Ill. — An international team of researchers, including a Northwestern University chemist, has discovered that metallic minerals on the deep-ocean floor produce oxygen — 13,000 feet below the surface.

The surprising discovery challenges long-held assumptions that only photosynthetic organisms, such as plants and algae, generate Earth’s oxygen. But the new finding shows there might be another way. It appears oxygen also can be produced at the seafloor — where no light can penetrate — to support the oxygen-breathing (aerobic) sea life living in complete darkness.

The study was published today (July 22) in the journal Nature Geoscience.

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Nodule photos

Polymetallic nodules, collected from the ocean floor, sit in simulated seawater in chemist Franz Geiger's laboratory at Northwestern University. Platinum electrodes measure the nodules voltages.

Please credit photos to Camille Bridgewater/Northwestern University

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