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Hot Stuff: Deep Ocean Fauna

Despite their delicate appearance, the red-and-white vent worms (Paralvinella sulfincola) studied by WSU's Raymond Lee thrive in one of the harshest environments on Earth.

When Washington State University biologist Raymond Lee set out to study the most heat-tolerant animals on Earth, he headed, oddly, for the open ocean off the coast of Washington.

There, with the help of a remote-operated submarine, he found his quarry: inch-long worms clinging to the sides of hydrothermal vents on the ocean floor more than a mile below the surface.

The vents are holes in the Earth's crust where molten minerals seep out of the planet's interior, raising the seawater to near-scalding temperatures and creating a habitat that is home to some of the oddest, and hardiest, organisms known.

Click here for the full story from Washington State Magazine.

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