Earth's Highest Microbial Ecosystem Found

Volcanic gases rising from the 19,850-foot-high Socompa volcano in the Andes are fueling the world’s highest known microbial ecosystems with carbon dioxide, water and methane to create tiny greenhouses, according to University of Colorado at Boulder researchers.
(Image credit: Steve Schmidt, University of Colorado)

Gases rising from deep within the Earth are fueling the world's highest known microbial ecosystems, which are perched on the rim of a 19,850-foot-high Andean volcano along with a few patches of plants, researchers announced today.

The microbes atop Socompa volcano, which straddles the border between Argentina and Chile high in the Atacama Desert, live in an environment more extreme than the microbes living in hydrothermal vents in deep oceans, said one of the scientists who made the discovery, Steve Schmidt of the University of Colorado-Boulder.

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