Hundreds of life forms never seen before live in the acid rays of this 6,000-foot-deep volcano

On Earth, some organisms like it to be hot, others like it to be cold, and others only feel at home among the burning acid rays of an underwater volcano.

The latter group – an ancient and eclectic bunch known as extremophiles – thrive in conditions that will kill your average earthling. Members of the group tend to be microscopic of scale, and it contains radiation resistant tardigrades, pressure-loving prokaryotes at the bottom of the Mariana Trench and the acid-swallowing bacteria that make Yellowstone’s Great Prismatic Spring so colorful.

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