Plutomurus ortobalaganensis has been found 1980m (6500ft) below sea level.
depends on how deep but there is marine life almost anywhere in the salty waters of the ocean.
You might find extremophiles in extreme environments such as deep sea hydrothermal vents, acidic hot springs, frozen Antarctic lakes, or deep underground in mines. These organisms have evolved to thrive in these harsh conditions that would be uninhabitable for most other life forms.
Yes, of course, or there would be no deserts. It does rain sometimes even in a desert, but not enough to sustain much plant life. If you dig deep enough, even in a desert, you will find damp earth and may even find an underground aquifer, and there will be some life forms there. Potable (drinkable) water is scarcer and you can run out of that a lot faster.
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Well from the episode "life in the underground" it is stated that he had his 13th birthday in the episode. But it is still a mystery on when his accurate birth date really is.
The locusts in Gears of war came from deep underground, and were forced upwards by the lambent. (The lambent are a parasitic life form infected with imulsion. They explode upon expiry.)
The Hadalpelagic Zone (The Trenches). Life can still be found there, though this area is mainly canyons.
At the end of the water cycle the water sokes into the ground. Cities, for example scottsdale, thrive on underground water. You usually don't find a lake in the middle of the desert so you have to dig deep wholes to drink.
I would think not because sunlight can approximately reach down around 200 meters. The deep oceans are pitch black. There are no plants, but there still is life. There are bio luminescent creatures.
Call and ask. CAn I find on the web
Technically, none! Plants and plant life form the basis of all food chains supporting life right up to the biggest carnivores. Even deep in underground caves, where life has evolved and adapted to survive without sunlight, strange ecologies have emerged to support life. Though green plants cannot grow (as there is no light), fungi (still plant life, but deriving their nutrition from organic material rather than via photosynthesis) and bacteria take their place.
Can you please rephrase? Do you mean the average walk of life such as demographics, do you mean the average lifespan of London Underground workers be it fatalities or ones who died of natural causes later in life and may have shortened their lifespan by working underground or what was their day to day life like?