• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Rare Red Sea Brine Pools Are One Of The Most Extreme Environments On Earth

February 22, 2025 by Deborah Bloomfield

A handsome fictional mathematician once said that life, uh, finds a way – and he’s not wrong. Earth is teeming with organisms that manage to survive in the most extreme environments, including in some rare deep-sea brine pools in the Red Sea, which very nearly went undiscovered.

ADVERTISEMENT GO AD FREE

The brine pools in question are in the Gulf of Aqaba, a large region in the northeast of the Red Sea that lies between the Arabian and Sinai peninsulas. There, in 2020, marine geoscientist Sam Purkis and his team were part of an OceanXplorer research cruise that was the first to discover brine pools in the gulf.

“We were very lucky,” said Purkis in a statement made in 2022, when a study detailing the team’s findings was published in Communications Earth & Environment. “The discovery came in the last five minutes of the ten-hour ROV dive that we could dedicate to this project.”



What they found would be a hostile environment to most; the complex of pools found 1,770 meters (5,807 feet) below the surface, are incredibly salty and completely devoid of oxygen, conditions that don’t exactly seem conducive to life.

And yet, the pools were found to be brimming with exactly that.

“At this great depth, there is ordinarily not much life on the seabed,” Purkis told Live Science. “However, the brine pools are a rich oasis of life. Thick carpets of microbes support a diverse suite of animals.”

That includes creatures like eels, flatfish, and houndsharks. Purkis and colleagues write in their study that “[t]hese predators appeared to deliberately cruise the brine surface”, waiting to snack on the unfortunate souls that accidentally end up in the pools and are immediately stunned or killed by the anoxic waters. Only extremophiles make it here.

ADVERTISEMENT GO AD FREE

The pools might also hold clues to the region’s meteorological and geological history, and not the kind you can find in the archives – this could be on “millennial timescales”, the researchers write.

Analysis of sedimentary rock samples extracted from the pools revealed “an unbroken record of past rainfall in the region, stretching back more than 1,000 years, plus records of earthquakes and tsunami,” Purkis told Live Science.

The researcher believes that extreme environments like the brine pools could help us to understand what might lie beyond Earth too.

“Until we understand the limits of life on Earth, it will be difficult to determine if alien planets can host any living beings,” said Purkis in the statement. “Our discovery of a rich community of microbes that survive in extreme environments can help trace the limits of life on Earth and can be applied to the search for life elsewhere in our solar system and beyond.”

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Kingfisher profit up 62% on home improvement boom
  2. Britain says exact date on U.S. travel reopening still not known
  3. Twitter Says It Is No Longer Stopping Any COVID-19 Misinformation
  4. Sapphires Are Cooked Up By Volcanic Fury – And Now We Know How

Source Link: Rare Red Sea Brine Pools Are One Of The Most Extreme Environments On Earth

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • Mother Orca Seen Carrying Dead Calf Once Again On Washington Coast
  • A Busy Spider Season Is Brewing: Why This Fall Could See A Boom Of Arachnid Activity
  • What Alternatives Are There To The Big Bang Model?
  • Magnetic Flip Seen Around First Photographed Black Hole Pushes “Models To The Limit”
  • Something Out Of Nothing: New Approach Mimics Matter Creation Using Superfluid Helium
  • Surströmming: Why Sweden’s Stinky Fermented Fish Smells So Bad (But People Still Eat It)
  • First-Ever Recording Of Black Hole Recoil Captured During Merger – And You Can Listen To It
  • The Moon Is Moving Away From Earth At A Rate Of About 3.8 Centimeters Per Year. Will It Ever Drift Apart?
  • As Solar Storm Hits Earth NASA Finds “The Sun Is Slowly Waking Up”
  • Plate Tectonics And CO2 On Planets Suggest Alien Civilizations “Are Probably Pretty Rare”
  • How To Watch The “Awkward” Partial Solar Eclipse This Weekend
  • World’s Oldest Pots: 20,000-Year-Old Vessels May Have Been Used For Cooking Clams Or Brewing Beer
  • “The Body Is Slowly And Continuously Heated”: 14,000-Year-Old Smoked Mummies Are World’s Oldest
  • Pizza Slices, Polaroid Pictures, And Over 300 Hats: What’s Left Behind In Yellowstone’s Hydrothermal Areas?
  • The Mathematical Paradox That Lets You Create Something From Nothing
  • Ancient Asteroid Ripped Apart In Collision Had Flowing Water
  • Flying Foxes Include The World’s Biggest Bat And The Largest Mammal Capable Of True Flight
  • NASA Responds To Claims That Interstellar Object 3I/ATLAS Is An Advanced Alien Spacecraft
  • Millions Of Tons Of Gold Are In Earth’s Oceans, Potentially Worth Over $2 Quadrillion
  • The Race Back To The Moon: US Vs China, Will What Happens Next Change The Future?
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version