Her creations also reflect a shared connection with geology, minerals and
deep sea life.
Not exact matches
Yet, amazingly, there are fish in the
sea who can
live at the same depth, and even
deeper, without getting crushed.
In seeking to root out man's claim to a special status in the universe,
deep ecologists are pagan pantheists who reject biblical religion, especially the injunction of Genesis 1:28 to «Fill the earth and subdue it; have dominion over the fish of the
seas, the birds of the sky, and all the
living beings that move on this earth.»
Just think about the size of the comet that would have to create something like that, not to mention all the other consequences that would arise from a massive impact of that nature (namely destruction of almost all
life on earth except for
deep,
deep sea creatures).
The point is delightfully illustrated in Eddington's parable about the zoologist studying
deep -
sea life by means of a net of ropes on a two - inch mesh.
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«There is nothing more extreme than
sea temperatures of 38 degrees, outside air temperatures in the 40's and 50's and suffocating heat and humidity
deep in the hulls of
live export vessels literally cooking animals alive.»
Her
life is in danger since the
sea holds
deep dark secrets as well.
In fact, wherever you find
life on Earth, from boiling hot vents
deep under the
sea to frozen bacteria in the clouds high above the planet, you find this sequence.
That's how
deep -
sea physiologist and ecologist Mackenzie Gerringer describes the pressure squeezing down on the
deepest known
living fish, some 8 kilometers down.
A mind - boggling variety of strange, unidentified
living things has been spotted in the
deep seas of the Mariana trench
The impact aftermath killed most
life on Earth, but the crater itself (bottom)-- shown with a central peak — remained hot long after the blast, perhaps creating a hydrothermal system similar to
deep -
sea vents.
Though this purple and yellow
sea star is normally found in shallow habitats, it can
live as
deep as 200 meters.
To find out more about how they manage to survive, Brandon Briggs at Miami University in Oxford, Ohio, and Frederick Colwell at Oregon State University in Corvallis have sequenced and compared genomes belonging to one particular class of
deep life — Firmicutes bacteria — sampled 21, 40 and 554 metres below the floor of the Andaman
Sea, west of Thailand.
She describes her project as studying hyperthermophilic archaea, the
living occupants of
deep -
sea hydrothermal vents that survive in extreme heat, pressure, and chemical toxicity.
«Four new
deep -
sea worm species discovered: Genetic analysis correctly pinpoints species on the tree of
life.»
Lots of animals differ in the parts of the color spectrum that they see best because of how they are tuned to their environments — whether they
live in the
deep sea or in caves, whether they mostly go out in the day or at night, or whether they're trying to pick up ultraviolet patterns on flowers or on prey.
Last April Italian and Danish
deep -
sea researchers described multicellular animals that conduct their entire
lives without respiring oxygen.
Linse says she expects to find something similar to ecosystems found in the
deep sea — a dark, extremely food - sparse environment with no plant
life.
Deep -
sea hydrothermal vents give rise to some of the most bizarre forms of
life on the planet, such as blind albino crabs.
Deep -
sea dwelling Mitsukurina owstoni, the goblin shark, is the oldest
living species among lamniform sharks, which go back about 125 million years and today include great whites, threshers and makos.
Amazing video footage of the snailfish, the first of a school of fish
living in the
deepest sea, was taken by the Hadal - Lander, a ROV with a titanium - encased high - resolution camera, in the Pacific's Japan Trench.
The moviemaker's expedition to the Mariana Trench could usher in a new type of undersea lab that extracts chemical compounds from microorganisms
living in the
deepest parts of the
sea
Then in March, a team of
deep -
sea scientists led by Craig Young of the University of Oregon and Adele Pile of the University of Sydney returned with a submersible to look for
life.
According to Andrew Peek, a molecular biologist at the University of California, Irvine,
deep -
sea clams seemed like a good candidate for cospeciation because neither the clam nor the bacteria that
live inside its cells have ever been found apart from one another.
Bacteria and archaea — collectively known as prokaryotes —
live pretty much everywhere, dividing happily in places from stomach acid to
deep -
sea vents.
Starting in the 1980s, many scientists argued that
life got its start in the scalding, mineral - rich waters streaming out of
deep -
sea hydrothermal vents.
Other foraminifera proved genetically identical to peers in the Arctic Ocean, suggesting a certain cosmopolitanism in these tiny creatures that have a globe - spanning range and can
live in the
deep sea wherever it may be found.
Plus, other work has found that the
deepest -
sea dwellers are among the longest -
lived and slowest to recover from the effects of bottom trawling.
Better knowledge of what governs the patterns of
life at
deep -
sea vents will enable responsible decisions about how to manage these
deep - ocean resources
A throng of reef - dwelling organisms
live on the edge of the Gulf of Mexico's continental shelf some 200 kilometers offshore, from corals in the shallower regions to sponges,
sea fans and other soft corals, and numerous fish species in the
deep.
An aquatic scientist describes the challenges of studying creatures that
live deep under the
sea
Although bacteria
live almost everywhere, from some 40 miles high in the atmosphere to
deep -
sea vents, 94 percent of them
live in the top 1,300 feet of Earth's surface.
Now the first experiments exposing
deep -
sea animals to the greenhouse gas suggest that carbon dioxide harms
life on the
sea floor.
McKay has visited the Geysir — from which the term geyser originated — multiple times to understand how geysers and
deep -
sea vents might affect
life.
The fish spend their
lives gently bobbing around the
deep sea, where their gelatinous appearance aids their buoyancy.
A study described here today at the American Geophysical Union's biennial Ocean Sciences Meeting shows that RNA's chemical building blocks fall apart within days to years at temperatures near boiling — a finding that poses problems for some origin of
life theories, especially ones picturing that
life arose in scalding settings such as
deep -
sea hydrothermal vents.
That began to change last year with the discovery of DNA sequences for an organism that no one has ever actually seen
living near a
deep -
sea vent on the ocean floor.
But in an Opinion paper published June 16 in Trends in Cell Biology, researchers propose that new genomic evidence derived from a
deep -
sea vent on the ocean floor suggests that the molecular machinery essential to eukaryotic
life was probably borrowed, little by little over time, from those simpler ancestors.
If the structure of Martian water is highly pressurised, perhaps we might expect to find organisms adapted to high pressure
life similar to piezophiles on Earth, such as
deep sea bacteria and other organisms that thrive at high pressure.
The sub brought up a rib from the mammoth carcass, and the researchers soon discovered the fiery plumes to be the gills of two entirely new species, related to worms, that
live near
deep -
sea hydrothermal vents.
We need to do more work to better understand how
deep -
sea sponges
live.»
Other mysterious
deep -
sea shark species could also have surprising
life spans, says Neil Hammerschlag at the University of Miami in Florida.
«Delving into the spread of marine
life: Understanding
deep -
sea limpets.»
To see how acidification might affect one deepwater creature, marine biologist Taewon Kim and colleagues at the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute in Moss Landing, California, used a robot submarine to vacuum up some
deep -
sea hermit crabs (Pagurus tanneri) that
live off the coast of California at depths of 900 meters.
Deep sea octopus
live in cold, nearly invariant temperatures.
For decades marine biologists have gotten glimpses of this glittering
life by casting nets and retrieving
deep -
sea organisms.
«Understanding the
deep sea is key to a sustainable blue economy: Deep - sea research needed to underpin future management and exploitation of living and non-living deep - sea resources.&ra
deep sea is key to a sustainable blue economy:
Deep - sea research needed to underpin future management and exploitation of living and non-living deep - sea resources.&ra
Deep -
sea research needed to underpin future management and exploitation of
living and non-
living deep - sea resources.&ra
deep -
sea resources.»
The particular chemistry and high pressures of vent habitats are difficult to replicate on terra firma, so the majority of
deep -
sea species have not been cultured in laboratories and much is unknown about their
life cycles.
The results launched a hunt for
life's origins that's now uncovering these building blocks in surprising places, like the surface of comets and in
deep -
sea hydrothermal vents.