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      Their World: A Diversity of Microbial Environments 

      The Snotty and the Stringy: Energy for Subsurface Life in Caves

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      Springer International Publishing

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          Biogenic methane formation in marine and freshwater environments: CO2 reduction vs. acetate fermentation—Isotope evidence

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            Karst Hydrogeology and Geomorphology

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              Biological activity in the deep subsurface and the origin of heavy oil.

              At temperatures up to about 80 degrees C, petroleum in subsurface reservoirs is often biologically degraded, over geological timescales, by microorganisms that destroy hydrocarbons and other components to produce altered, denser 'heavy oils'. This temperature threshold for hydrocarbon biodegradation might represent the maximum temperature boundary for life in the deep nutrient-depleted Earth. Most of the world's oil was biodegraded under anaerobic conditions, with methane, a valuable commodity, often being a major by-product, which suggests alternative approaches to recovering the world's vast heavy oil resource that otherwise will remain largely unproduced.
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                2016
                May 03 2016
                : 203-224
                10.1007/978-3-319-28071-4_5
                8069be3b-ffb1-453b-86e5-c805b39d8d91
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