Archae are a philo of life, similar to procaryotes, but fundamentally different in terms of their molecular Biology and evolution.
Procaryotes are bacteria, like the mould in your toilet, or the cause of a yeast infection. Bacteria live pretty much everywhere.
Procaryotes are more often adapted for extreme environments than bacteria. They are found in large quantities in salt water.
They were identified as different fairly recently with the advent of modern molecular biology.
Archae
Archae
Archae, Bacteria and Eukaryota
Firstly, archae are not a kingdom but a domain. A domain comes before kingdoms in the taxonomic classification system 3 domains are Eukaryae, Prokaryae and Archae. As you can see from their names, the domain Eukaryae is eukaryotic and the domain Prokaryae is prokaryotic. Archae are different. They are bacteria which live in extreme conditions such as extremely high temperatures, with little oxygen or water, etc. Archae are neither prokaryotic or eukaryotic.
Archae are single celled microorganisms that constitue a kingdom or domain. They can thrive in different environments including those that are very cold, very hot and very wet.
Eukaryotes have organelles in membranes
Domains: Bacteria Archae Eukarya Kingdoms: Eubacteria Archaebacteria/Archae Protista Animalia Fungi Plantae You're on your own from there.
Bacteria ,archae, and eukaryotes Animal and plants
The domain (Archae, Eubacteria and Eukarya). The next level is the kingdom (Plants, Animals, Fungi, Protists, Archae and Eubacteria - old style:Plants, Animals, Fungi, Protists, and Prokaryotes).
pie
Bacteria archaea
bacteria;archae and euba