Biosphere 2

Overview

Biosphere 2 is a 3.14-acre research facility in Arizona that houses miniaturized versions of various ecosystems, including a tropical rainforest, an ocean, and a savanna grassland. The world’s largest closed ecological system was initially designed to determine if life could survive in an artificial habitat modeled after Earth—Biosphere 1—as a predecessor to space colonization.

1440 Findings

Hours of research by our editors, distilled into minutes of clarity.

  • Biosphere 2 is the largest Earth science experiment ever built

    The vivarium—an enclosed system including animals and plants—is sealed from below with 454 metric tons of stainless steel liner and includes an ocean habitat with more than 700,000 gallons of seawater. B2 is visited by 100,000 people yearly, including more than 10,000 K-12 students.

  • An artificial ‘lung’ protects the glass structures making up Biosphere 2

    Although confined from much of the surrounding environment, B2 allows sunlight to enter, enabling its plants to engage in photosynthesis. Expansion chambers were built to protect the facility's integrity by managing changes in gas pressure resulting from temperature fluctuations.

  • Take a series of virtual tours of Biosphere 2

    The videos provide a 360-degree view of the indoor rainforest, ocean ecosystem, Landscape Evolution Observatory, and underground technosphere. A Google Maps Street View option is available to explore additional biomes, with each associated with a different floor level on the bottom right.

  • Exposed concrete led to oxygen depletion within Biosphere 2

    Instead of being absorbed by plants through photosynthesis to produce oxygen, significant amounts of carbon dioxide were taken up by the calcium hydroxide in the concrete, trapping the oxygen in calcium carbonate and water. This concrete was sealed before the start of the second B2 mission.

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