
Intraterrestrials Discovering the Strangest Life on Earth
A biologistās firsthand account of the hunt for life beneath earthās surfaceāand how new discoveries are challenging our most basic assumptions about the nature of life on Earth
Life thrives in the deepest, darkest recesses of Earthās crustāfrom methane seeps in the ocean floor to the highest reaches of Arctic permafrostāand it is unlike anything seen on the surface. Intraterrestrials shares what scientists are learning about these strange types of microbial lifeāand how research expeditions to some of the most extreme locales on the planet are broadening our understanding of what life is and how its earliest forms may have evolved.
Drawing on her experiences and those of her fellow scientists working in challenging and often dangerous conditions, Karen Lloyd takes readers on an adventure from the bottom of the ocean through the jungles of Central America to the high-altitude volcanoes of the Andes. Only discovered in recent decades, āintraterrestrialsāāsubsurface beings that are truly alienāare demonstrating how life can exist in boiling water, pure acid, and bleach. They enable us to peer back to the very dawn of life on Earth, disclosing deep branches on the tree of life that push the limits of what we thought possible. Some can ābreatheā rocks or even electrons. Others may live for hundreds of thousands of years or longer. All of them are living in ways that are totally foreign to us surface dwellers.
Blending captivating storytelling with the latest science, Intraterrestrials reveals what microbes in Earthās deep subsurface biosphere can tell us about the prospects for finding life on other planetsāand the future of life on our own.
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Description
A biologistās firsthand account of the hunt for life beneath earthās surfaceāand how new discoveries are challenging our most basic assumptions about the nature of life on Earth
Life thrives in the deepest, darkest recesses of Earthās crustāfrom methane seeps in the ocean floor to the highest reaches of Arctic permafrostāand it is unlike anything seen on the surface. Intraterrestrials shares what scientists are learning about these strange types of microbial lifeāand how research expeditions to some of the most extreme locales on the planet are broadening our understanding of what life is and how its earliest forms may have evolved.
Drawing on her experiences and those of her fellow scientists working in challenging and often dangerous conditions, Karen Lloyd takes readers on an adventure from the bottom of the ocean through the jungles of Central America to the high-altitude volcanoes of the Andes. Only discovered in recent decades, āintraterrestrialsāāsubsurface beings that are truly alienāare demonstrating how life can exist in boiling water, pure acid, and bleach. They enable us to peer back to the very dawn of life on Earth, disclosing deep branches on the tree of life that push the limits of what we thought possible. Some can ābreatheā rocks or even electrons. Others may live for hundreds of thousands of years or longer. All of them are living in ways that are totally foreign to us surface dwellers.
Blending captivating storytelling with the latest science, Intraterrestrials reveals what microbes in Earthās deep subsurface biosphere can tell us about the prospects for finding life on other planetsāand the future of life on our own.










