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1: Earth’s Microbiome

  • Page ID
    131068
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    “Unlike our universities, nature is not compartmentalized into various departments. The natural sciences have no real boundaries; if you want to question one aspect of science, you really must be educated in ancillary disciplines.”

    —William Schopf

    Microorganisms effectively rule the Earth. Their small size places them beneath our perception, but they are the numerically dominant life form on the planet (Magnabosco et al., 2018; Whitman et al., 1998). It is not possible to know the exact abundance of microorganisms overall on Earth, but it is clearly a vast number. In the oceans alone, for example, estimates suggest that there are 100 million times as many bacteria \((13 \times 10^{28})\) as stars in the known universe (“Microbiology by numbers,” 2011). Although microorganisms are individually small, they are collectively enormous.

    But what are microbes? What are they doing? Why is it useful for earth scientists to know about them? In this chapter, we will start to answer these questions by summarizing some important aspects of microbial life. We will also take a look ahead and consider the topics and organization of this book.


    This page titled 1: Earth’s Microbiome is shared under a CC BY-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Matthew F Kirk via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform; a detailed edit history is available upon request.

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