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The bottom of the Red Sea hides a mystery and the recent discovery of some scientists unveils it

Researchers have found lethal brine pools deep in the Red Sea that may offer insights into Earth’s past and the search for extraterrestrial life.

Red Sea brine pools | AI image
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Calum Roche
Sports-lover turned journalist, born and bred in Scotland, with a passion for football (soccer). He’s also a keen follower of NFL, NBA, golf and tennis, among others, and always has an eye on the latest in science, tech and current affairs. As Managing Editor at AS USA, uses background in operations and marketing to drive improvements for reader satisfaction.
Update:

Deep beneath the Red Sea’s surface, scientists have stumbled upon a phenomenon that sounds like it belongs in a sci-fi thriller: brine pools. But, as we read in a recent publication from Nature, Steven Spielberg is not required for this tale.

What are these Red Sea brine pools?

These aren’t your typical serene underwater lakes: they’re dense, salty basins that spell doom for most marine life. Any fish or crab that wanders into these waters is swiftly immobilized or killed, creating a grim spectacle of nature’s lethality.

But these “death pools” aren’t just marine death traps. Researchers believe they could be time capsules, preserving records of ancient climatic events and offering clues about the origins of life on Earth. The unique conditions within these pools mirror the harsh environments that early microbial life might have thrived in, providing a window into our planet’s distant past.

From the Red Sea to other planets

And the study goes further, even beyond our own planet. The extreme conditions found here are thought to resemble environments on certain moons and exoplanets, suggesting that if life can exist in the Red Sea’s brine pools, it might also survive in similar extraterrestrial settings. This makes these deadly basins not just a subject of earthly intrigue but a focal point in the quest to find life beyond our planet.

So, while the brine pools at the bottom of the Red Sea are lethal to most marine life, they offer invaluable insights into Earth’s history and the potential for life elsewhere in the universe. With talk ongoing in some billionaire dream worlds of populating the Red Planet, this is maybe a valuable reminder to us all that there is still so much to be learned from our own home.

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