Home > Just Freaking Neat, Science > Antarctica’s Taylor Glacier Blood Falls, Microbial Life in an Impossible Place

Antarctica’s Taylor Glacier Blood Falls, Microbial Life in an Impossible Place

Roughly two thousand years ago, the Taylor Glacier sealed beneath it a small body of water which contained an ancient community of microbes. Trapped below a thick layer of ice, they have remained there ever since, isolated inside a natural time capsule. Evolving independently of the rest of the living world, these microbes exist in a world with no light or free oxygen and little heat, and are essentially the definition of “primordial ooze.” The trapped lake has very high salinity and is rich in iron, which gives the waterfall its red color. A fissure in the glacier allows the subglacial lake to flow out, forming the falls without contaminating the ecosystem within.

Yet another example of how life on earth can exist in near impossible conditions.

(via @slantsmcgee)

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