Top Ten Places Where Life Shouldn't Exist... But Does
Smithsonian lists the most improbable, inhospitable and absurd habitats on Earth
- By Laura Helmuth
- Smithsonian.com, October 13, 2009, Subscribe
10. Yellowstone's Hot Springs
If you wanted to kill something, or maybe just dispose of a body, you couldn’t do much better than the conditions in Yellowstone’s hot springs. The springs are near the boiling point of water and acidic enough to dissolve nails. But some microbes thrive there, and the pigments they produce give the springs vivid, otherworldly colors.
The heat-loving bacteria Thermus aquaticus is the most famous Yellowstone microbe; it makes an enzyme that researchers use in genetics labs to make copies of DNA. Other Yellowstone microbes eat hydrogen, and a few years ago scientists there discovered an entirely new phylum of photosynthesizing bacteria.
Because there are so many hot springs and mud pots and geysers in Yellowstone, with a variety of temperatures and chemical compositions, the park hosts the greatest known diversity of archaea. Simple, single-celled organisms without nuclei, archaea are a branch of life that has been known only since the 1970s.
Many archaea thrive at hot temperatures (they are also found in volcanoes). And inside some Yellowstone archaea—just to complete the microbial ecosystem—are heat-loving viruses.
9. In Bodies Below the Freezing Point of Water
Some animals survive not only in environments below freezing, but in bodies below freezing. Spiders and insects produce antifreeze that prevent them from freezing solid. The larvae of certain Arctic flies can survive being chilled to about -76 Fahrenheit.
Many species of frogs, newts and turtles do freeze—more than 50 percent of the water in their bodies may be ice. The trick is that they carefully control where the ice forms. As the animal cools, its cells and organs squeeze out water and shrink. Only water outside of the animal’s cells freezes; the crystals may grow in between muscle fibers or around organs.
The coldest sustained body temperature in a mammal is about 27 degrees Fahrenheit, measured in Arctic ground squirrels. Their strategy is called “supercooling”—even though the fluid in their bodies is below the freezing point, the animals eliminate any material on which ice crystals could form.
8. Entirely Alone
Most ecosystems are complicated. A member of any given species has to find other species to eat and avoid those species that want to eat it. If it’s a parasite, it needs a host; if it’s a plant, it may need bacteria to help it process nitrogen or bees to pollinate its flowers.
Not so at the bottom of an almost two-mile-deep South African gold mine. There, Candidatus Desulforudis audaxviator is all there is. This species of bacteria, one of the deepest ever found, lives at about 140 degrees Fahrenheit, fixes its own nitrogen, and eats sulfate—all in complete isolation.
7. The Galapagos Islands
Sure, they’re famous for inspiring Darwin’s theory of evolution by natural selection. But the reason it’s easy (well, in retrospect) to observe evolution on these islands is that they’re almost entirely inhospitable to life. They emerged in the middle of the Pacific Ocean as the tops of still-active volcanoes. They were heat-sterilized and 600 miles from land.
Everything that lives there now flew in on the wind (most plants there have airborne seeds), rode a freak current (including Galapagos penguins, the only species of its kind to live at the equator), or floated on a raft of vegetation (like the giant tortoises). (That is, aside from the species humans have introduced more recently.) Colonization happened rarely and most species stayed where they landed, so relatively simple ecosystems grew up, with enough differences among islands to make them a showcase of evolutionary principles.
6. Acidic Mine Drainage (and Runners-Up)
California’s Iron Mountain was mined starting in the 1800s for gold, silver, copper and other minerals. The minerals originated in the roots of a volcano and were deposited with a lot of sulfide—a compound that turns to sulfuric acid in the presence of water. Mining exposed the sulfides and eventually made the tailings as acidic as battery acid and full of heavy metals such as arsenic.
But plenty of microbes live in the mine. They float on a lake of acid in a pink slick called a biofilm that is made by certain bacteria in the microbial community. Some of the archaea in the mine eat iron and make the already acidic conditions even more acidic by actively converting sulfide into sulfuric acid. The acid eats away pyrite (fool’s gold) and other minerals in the cave, adding more metals into the toxic soup.
This habitat barely edged out other harsh conditions for microbes: extreme heat or cold, intense pressure, and even radiation from a nuclear reactor. Three Mile Island was no Chernobyl, but a 1979 accident there caused the partial meltdown of a reactor and released radioactive gas into the atmosphere. It took many years to clean up the mess, mostly with robots and remotely operated cranes overseen through video cameras. Much to the clean-up crew’s surprise, the coolant water near the core was cloudy: microorganisms were thriving in it despite high levels of radioactivity.
As for pressure, the greatest that any bacteria have ever withstood is 16,000 times greater than the atmospheric pressure we experience at sea level. In experiments at the Carnegie Institution in Washington, D.C., Robert Hazen and his colleagues “subjected a strain of the familiar intestinal bacterium Escherichia coli to the ridiculous pressure of 16,000 atmospheres — a value obtained accidentally by overzealous tightening of a diamond anvil pressure cell.” Oops! But when they examined the bacteria later, a few had survived this pressure—which is greater than any pressure at any potentially life-sustaining depth (that is, any depth that is not hotter than the theoretical heat limit for life of 302 degrees Fahrenheit) on the planet.
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Comments (18)
Thanks for the information it was kinda helpful
Posted by Jameson on September 25,2012 | 01:57 PM
"If you wanted to kill something, or maybe just dispose of a body..."
God- I think we could have done without that informative bit.
Posted by CDLTNLA on July 9,2010 | 01:01 AM
Facinating articles and comments. God is awesome! We can't even presume to know it all. Creative force and the will or plan to live is in the tiniest of creation, even bacteria! Totally agree so called patriotism and radical religions need to stop banging the war drum.
Posted by mary miller on February 2,2010 | 01:54 PM
Reference is made here to bacteria being isolated by Dale Griffin at 11 km above the Earth. We and Indian researchers have discovered bacteria and fungi at 41 km,i.e. 25 miles up in the stratosphere.
Professor Milton Wainwright,University of Sheffield, UK .
Posted by Prof Milton Wainwright on December 11,2009 | 06:29 PM
"Three Mile Island was no Chernobyl"? Perhaps not, but it WAS a very serious nuclear energy-generating utility accident, similar enough, indeed, to the Russian Chernobyl disaster.
I am so weary of Earth's 200 nations always beating their pathetic, patriotic drums, constantly denying or minimizing the various violences and disasters each one's governments and corporations are responsible for--the same sort of patriotism motivating the writer here to say,"Three Mile Island was...". --Oh, come on! All Humanity needs to vastly improve, EVERY nation has had their own embarrassing atrocities. Until this is openly admitted by all, human actions will never evolve, a more pressing necessity than whether this or that species survives...in fact, such a refreshing honesty could well save the world.
Posted by amber ladeira on November 16,2009 | 10:15 AM
As for number 1, also small spiders (on their migration threads) and insects have been found at very high altitudes. I've read about a bird (either a vulture or a raptor) that was spotted at about 12 km height by pilots. A common toad was apparently found by mountaineers at about 7 km height in the Himalaya's (how a could-blooded animal ended up there beats me). Some bacteria survived over a year on a spacecraft on the moon. I've read of bacteria living hundreds of meters under the earths surface. Under many kilometers of ice on Antarctica are lakes probably teeming with life (because science wants not to polute those lakes with surface bacteria they can't go there as yet).
Posted by Auke on November 8,2009 | 05:44 PM
I agree with Andrew, humans do not understand life or anything for that matter!
Posted by Sibyle on November 8,2009 | 01:46 PM
God is so amazing :)
Posted by Robyn on November 7,2009 | 04:33 PM
ummm... its a bit boring seeing as more than half of these caims arew bacteria and fungi - you forgot to say about the 'living rocks' in the center of the earth and the fish found in the deepest caves without any eyes...
Posted by chris on October 28,2009 | 12:24 PM
As pointed Brad G, I disagree with place #10. As far as we know life began in a hot place. ¿The reason? If you look at a phylogenetic tree, you will find that all the organisms at the bottom are thermophiles.
Posted by M Sánchez on October 28,2009 | 10:38 AM
You forgot the life on the nuclear reactors.
Posted by Tin on October 27,2009 | 11:44 AM
You did´nt mention the best one, the fungus that lives of the radiation in the nuclear reactor of Chernoby.
Posted by on October 27,2009 | 09:53 AM
In response to #10, aren't some of the modern theories of how all life began related to super heated vents?...
http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg20427306.200-was-our-oldest-ancestor-a-protonpowered-rock.html?page=4
Posted by Brad G on October 26,2009 | 11:59 PM
You missed one: Inside the Chernobyl nuclear reactor.
http://www.cosmosmagazine.com/node/2095/full
Posted by 2552 on October 26,2009 | 04:51 PM
Maybe humans don't understand life.
Posted by Andrew on October 26,2009 | 04:14 PM
Life in the most unlikely places is an amazing article with facts that are incredible and verified. This quality of journalism related to scientific observations of environmental diversity in which forms of life flourish is a worthy posting on the internet. It encourages all of us to respect the biosphere and to be curious about the dynamics of ecosystems in all areas of the world.
Thank you for this eye opening review of biology.
Posted by dee on October 22,2009 | 01:18 PM
With these survival stories, I find it easy to envision life of some kind in the farthest reaches of space. As others have noted, it is no longer a question of IF we will find it, but WHEN. Or perhaps IT has found US already!
Posted by Berniece Owen on October 16,2009 | 02:13 PM
Life and the variety of way's it finds to survive is always amazing!
Posted by maia on October 14,2009 | 12:52 PM