Scientists have long known that steep mountain ranges can draw carbon dioxide (CO 2 ) out of the atmosphere -- as erosion exposes new rock, it also starts a chemical reaction between minerals on hill slopes and CO 2 in the air, "weathering" the rock and using CO 2 to produce carbonate minerals like calcite.

A new study led by researchers from the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI), however, has turned this idea on its head. In paper released on April 12th in the journal Science, the scientists announced that the erosion process can also be a source of new CO 2 gas, and can release it back into the atmosphere far faster than it's being absorbed into newly-exposed rock.

"This goes against a long-standing hypothesis that more mountains mean more erosion and weathering, which means an added reduction of CO 2 . It turns out it's much more complicated than that," says Jordon Hemingway, a postdoctoral fellow at Harvard University and lead author on the paper.

The source of this extra CO 2 isn't entirely geological. Instead, it's the byproduct of tiny microbes in mountain soils that "eat" ancient sources of organic carbon that are trapped in the rock. As the microbes metabolize these minerals, they spew out carbon dioxide.

The researchers came to this realization after studying one of the most erosion-prone mountain chains in the world -- the central range of Taiwan. This steep-sided range is pummeled by more than three major typhoons each year, each of which mechanically erode the soil and rock through heavy rains and winds.

Hemingway and his colleagues examined samples of soil, bedrock, and river sediments from the central range, looking for telltale signs of organic carbon in the rock. What they found there surprised them.

"At the very bottom of the soil profile, you have basically unweathered rock. As soon as you hit the base of the soil, layer, though, you see rock that's loose but not yet fully broken down, and at this point the organic carbon present in the bedrock seems to disappear entirely," notes Hemingway. At that point in the soil, the team also noticed an increase in lipids that are known to come from bacteria, he adds.

"We don't yet know exactly which bacteria are doing this -- that would require genomics, metagenomics, and other microbiological tools that we didn't use in this study. But that's the next step for this research," says WHOI marine geochemist Valier Galy, senior author and Hemingway's advisor in the MIT/WHOI Joint Program.

The group is quick to note that the total level of CO 2 released by these microbes isn't severe enough to have any immediate impact on climate change -- instead, these processes take place on geologic timescales. The WHOI team's research may lead to a better understanding of how mountain-based (or "lithospheric") carbon cycles actually work, which could help generate clues to how CO 2 has been regulated since the Earth itself formed.