Monday will see an international team of scientists set sail for the mid-Atlantic on a quest to sample microbes living deep in the ocean floor.
The expedition will use new types of rock drill developed in the UK and Germany to retrieve cores from up to 80m below the seabed.
The target of interest is the Atlantis Massif, a 4km-high underwater mountain.
Scientists say its rocks may hold clues to the origins of life on Earth and its potential on other planets and moons.
The team is interested in the process of serpentinisation, which involves the alteration of material brought up from the mantle.
This occurs along the mid-Atlantic Ridge - the rugged chain of formations stretching down the centre of the ocean, where new crust is being created.
Rocks that contain iron- and magnesium-rich minerals (olivine) react with seawater to produce gases such as hydrogen and methane.
And this chemistry can then drive the metabolism of simple organisms.
"They can 'eat' hydrogen, they can eat methane, they can eat some of the smaller carbon compounds that are formed by the reaction of water with these rocks," explained expedition co-chief scientist Dr Beth Orcutt.
"They get energy under those conditions to help them grow, and to form new cells," said the researcher from the Bigelow Laboratory for Ocean Sciences in Maine, US.
The Atlantis Massif is known to be an excellent location for studying this process.
Back in 2000, an expedition stumbled across huge towers of carbonate on one side of the mountain.
These pillars were precipitated in the hot, alkaline waters created by serpentinisation.
Remote-control drilling
Scientists have already sampled the biology around them, finding abundant single-celled microorganisms known as Archaea.
They now want to drill into the nearby rock itself to see if different types of microbes persist and how exactly they function.
Normally, this exercise would be run from a rig on a specially adapted ship. But the team is going to the massif on a standard research vessel.
The UK’s RRS James Cook will deploy remote-controlled drill mechanisms, in what is a first for this type of expedition.
These systems, which are about the size of a shipping container, will be lowered on to the underwater mountain by a winch.
Once on the seabed, their weight will keep them steady. The machines carry a cartridge full of drill rods and core barrels that they add together to push tens of metres into the underlying rock.
Sensors and sampling equipment can also be lowered into the hole to make a range of scientific measurements.
"It is quite deep down - 750m to 1,750m below the sea surface," said Dr Carol Cotterill, a senior marine geophysicist with the British Geological Survey.
"We have two remote drills: the BGS RD2 and the Marum Mebo drill. They're both big bits of kit.
"They're attached by umbilicals, and each of them has cameras on them that send live feeds to the surface.
"So, the minute these drills are deployed, the respective drill teams will rush to their container control rooms to start running operations."
From Atlantic to alien
Researchers are fascinated by the process of serpentinisation because of what it could say about life's ability to thrive in even the most extreme circumstances.
It has been posited that life on Earth may even have started in locations where upwelling rock from the mantle meets the ocean.
And scientists who study the possibility of living things beyond our planet consider such processes to be among the most likely means to sustain biology elsewhere in the cosmos.