Nothing we've been able to discover. If there was life on (or more properly, "in") Saturn, it would probably be radically different from anything we know of, because Saturn is primarily a giant orb of gaseous hydrogen, with pressures that increase astronomically with depth.
No. People would be killed instantly if they tried to live on Saturn. The planet is too cold, it is filled with poisonous gas, and the gravitational pressure of the giant planet would crush anyone who tried to live there. The planet might not even have a solid surface. It could be just gas and a molten core. You could try and live on one of Saturn's smaller moons, but, live on Saturn; Never.
Life may already exist on Saturn. Not "life as we know it" here on Earth, of course, but life here on Earth evolved for Earth-like conditions. We cannot be certain that there isn't some other sort of "life" that evolved THERE on Saturn - or perhaps more likely, on Saturn's moon Titan.
Life, as we generally understand it, consumes energy, grows, and reproduces itself. It ingests some sort of food or energy, and produces some sort of excretions.
There are bacteria that exist in the sulfurous volcanic vents at the bottom of the sea; there are other bacteria that exist in the icy waters of Antarctica. It's possible that there may be bacteria on Mars, or in the hot soup that is the atmosphere of Venus.
If your question was more along the lines of "What conditions would allow EARTHLIKE life on Saturn?", then we're going to have to ask for some sort of spacecraft or space station. It's highly unlikely that we will ever be able to live on the "surface" of Saturn, or even if the concept of a "surface" of Saturn makes any sense.
In theory they could, but a gas-giant like Saturn gives of intense doses of radiation every second, and the the sheer amount of it could kill you in a few seconds.
No. The planet itself can't even do that.
weiners
Temperatures on Saturn would not sustain life. Saturn is too far from the Sun and therefore too cold to allow anything to live there.
There is no way to know for certain, but probably no. Conditions on Saturn would not support life as we know it. If you are looking for visiting aliens, there is currently no scientific evidence that any such visitors have been in the solar system.
Water that flows under ground would allow life on mars
of course
weiners
Temperatures on Saturn would not sustain life. Saturn is too far from the Sun and therefore too cold to allow anything to live there.
If it was like earth
There is no way to know for certain, but probably no. Conditions on Saturn would not support life as we know it. If you are looking for visiting aliens, there is currently no scientific evidence that any such visitors have been in the solar system.
Water that flows under ground would allow life on mars
No, life would not survive on Saturn. Saturn has sub-zero temperatures, harmful gases, and it does not contain the necessities for life.
of course
No we would just vaporize
The same as you would need on Earth. The trouble is that strong enough sunlight is not available on Saturn for advanced life.
scientifically there was life on Saturn but then somehow the life on Saturn saw your face and died
dark awful quiet strange and more
There is no life on Saturn.