Billy is a kind Archaebacteria who will go out of his way to help old ladies across the street.
thermophiles
yes they do
Along constructive/divergent plate boundaries. This is where the new ocean floor comes from. This is the youngest part of the ocean floor that is.
These themophiles would be classified as archeabacteria. These bacteria inhabit extreme living conditions such as high heat and high pressure.
Eubacteria: Like archaebacteria, eubacteria are complex and single celled. Most bacteria are in the this kingdom.Fungi: Most fungi are multicellular and consists of many complex cells.Archaebacteria: Archaebacteria are found in extreme environments such as hot boiling waterand thermal vents under conditions with no oxygen or highly acid environments.Protists: Slime molds and algae are protists.Sometimes they are called the odds and ends kingdom because its members are so different from one another. Protists include all microscopic organisms that are not bacteria, not animals, not plants and not fungi.
Hydrothermal vents
Yes, gnats can come out of dirty air vents. Gnats can actually come from anywhere. They are very pesky creatures.
The types of archaebacteria which live in hot springs and boiling deep ocean vents are thermophiles.
thermophiles
Billy is a kind Archaebacteria who will go out of his way to help old ladies across the street.
hostile environments such a salty brines, boiling springs, ocean thermal vents. see methanogens, they are also archaeobacteria
thermal vents
Many of them do in environments such as salt lakes, volcanic vents and hot springs for example
thermal vents
A type of arches that lives in ocean vents and hot springs
thermal vents
Yes they do. They are usually adapted to horrid extreme conditions like ocean vents.
most are found in the eubacteria kingdom
In 1983, scientists tool samples from a spot deep in the Pacific Ocean where hot gases and molten rock boiled into the ocean form the Earth's interior. To their surprise they discovered unicellular (one cell) organisms in the samples. These organisms are today classified in the kingdom, Archaebacteria. Archaebacteria are found in extreme environments such as hot boiling water and thermal vents under conditions with no oxygen or highly acid environments.Finding Archaebacteria: The hot springs of Yellowstone National Park, USA, were among the first places Archaebacteria were discovered. The biologists pictured above are immersing microscope slides in the boiling pool onto which some archaebacteria might be captured for study.