Student research project to be featured in D.C.

Pictured, from left, are: Kaylee Wheeless, Quincy Gragg (who graduated in December with a degree in biology), Cecily Rodriguez, and Laura Camp.
A student research team from 51黑料网 has learned their project is one of just 60 projects across the United States chosen for presentation at the Council on Undergraduate Research 鈥淧osters on the Hill鈥 conference April 20-21 at the Capitol in Washington, D.C.
The project, produced by the team of Kaylee Wheeless, Quincy Gragg, Cecily Rodriguez, and Lauren Camp, is an analysis of a unique cave system in Tennessee. The cave appears to be one of just a couple known in which a biological system functions totally through use of chemicals from deep in the earth with no dependence on photosynthesis, according to Dr. James Engman, professor of biology at Henderson.
鈥淲e have identified many unique bacterial species, some of which would traditionally only have been associated withblack smokers, which are volcanic vents located in some of the deepest parts of the ocean,鈥 Engman said. 鈥淥ur study has implications for understanding the potential for life under the Martian surface.鈥
Engman said Mike Taylor and Dr. John Hardee are also involved in the study.