Akademik

extreme life
(ik.STREEM lyf)
n.
Life that exists in an extreme environment.
Example Citation:
Scientists plumbing the bubbling, black depths of a geothermal hot spring in Idaho have discovered a unique community of microbes that thrive without sunlight or oxygen. ... In light of the findings, researchers said the question should no longer be whether extreme life exists on Mars and elsewhere. "Rather, did life originate there, or was it transplanted from Earth?" said University of Colorado planetary scientist Bruce Jakosky.
— Joseph B. Verrengia, "Scientists find strange underground microbes that need no sunlight or oxygen," The Associated Press, January 17, 2002
Earliest Citation:
Blind shrimp, mammoth white clams, brown hairy snails — they're among 300 species that marine biologists have discovered in the last 20 years. They thrive around deep-sea volcanic hot springs.
— Sharon Guynup, "Extreme life," Science World, October 4, 1999
Notes:
The extended version extreme life form is a bit older:
We're going to take a quick break and come back and talk lots more about these extreme, extreme conditions and extreme life forms that can live there, and meet a guy who actually goes out and looks for them in, of all places, one of the biggest national parks.
— Ira Flatow, "Extremophiles: Life on the Edge," National Public Radio, August 14, 1998
Related Words:
charismatic megafauna
extreme gardening
extreme ironing
extreme tourism
extremophile
faux kidnapping
frozen zoo
good-for-you bacteria
whale fall
Category:
Biology

New words. 2013.