{Reference Type}: Journal Article {Title}: Hydrogen Production from Alteration of Chicxulub Crater Impact Breccias: Potential Energy Source for a Subsurface Microbial Ecosystem. {Author}: Kring DA;Bach W; {Journal}: Astrobiology {Volume}: 21 {Issue}: 12 {Year}: Dec 2021 {Factor}: 4.045 {DOI}: 10.1089/ast.2021.0045 {Abstract}: A sulfate-reducing population of thermophiles grew in porous, permeable niches within glass-bearing impact breccias of the Chicxulub impact crater. The microbial community grew in an impact-generated hydrothermal system that vented on the seafloor several hundred meters beneath the sea surface. Potential electron donors for that metabolism are hydrocarbons, although a strong C-isotope signature of that source does not exist. Model calculations explored here suggest that alteration of glass within the impact breccias may have produced H2 in sufficient quantities for population growth as the hydrothermal system cooled through thermophilic temperatures, although it is sensitive to the oxidation state of iron in the melt rock prior to hydrothermal alteration and the secondary mineral assemblage. At high water-to-rock ratios and temperatures below 45°C, H2 yields are insufficient to maintain a population of hydrogenotrophic sulfate-reducing bacteria, but yields double with a higher proportion of ferrous iron between 45 and 65°C. The most reduced rocks (i.e., highest proportion of ferrous iron) that are allowed to form andradite, which is observed in core samples, produce copious amounts of H2 in the temperature window for thermophiles and hyperthermophiles. Mixtures of melt rock and carbonate, which is observed in breccia matrices, produce somewhat less H2, and the onset of massive H2 production is shifted to higher temperatures (i.e., lower W/R).