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 In an Atlantis science lab, Jim Holden of the University of Massachusetts grows microbes collected from hydrothermal vents on the seafloor. These thermophiles thrive in high-temperature sulfides and fluids, as hot as 200°F (95°C).


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In an Atlantis science lab, Jim Holden of the University of Massachusetts grows microbes collected from hydrothermal vents on the seafloor. These thermophiles thrive in high-temperature sulfides and fluids, as hot as 200°F (95°C).

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