News

– July 3rd.; one on the archaeal types (Christian Jeanthon and colleagues) and one on anaerobic moderate thermophiles (to be presented by Elizaveta Bonch-Osmolovskaia). Notes for editor ...
Some of these microbes, called thermophiles, live at temperatures hot enough to boil water on the surface. They grow from the chemicals coming out of active volcanoes.
Similar deep-sea volcanoes found on Earth support microbial life that lives inside solid rock without sunlight and oxygen. Some of these microbes, called thermophiles, live at temperatures hot ...
Thermophiles in the lab Back in my laboratory in Amherst, my research team isolates new microbes from the hydrothermal vent samples and grows them under conditions that mimic those they experience ...