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Scientists long thought life in the deepest ocean trenches depended mostly on scraps of sunlight-fed life drifting down from above — but at 9,500 metres beneath the Pacific, researchers found whole communities of tubeworms and clams powered instead by m - Space Daily

Scientists long thought life in the deepest ocean trenches depended mostly on scraps of sunlight-fed life drifting down from above — but at 9,500 metres beneath the Pacific, researchers found whole communities of tubeworms and clams powered instead by m Spa...

Space Daily·
AI summary

Scientists long thought life in the deepest ocean trenches depended mostly on scraps of sunlight-fed life drifting down from above — but at 9,500 metres beneath the Pacific, researchers found whole communities of tubeworms and clams powered instead by m Spa...

What happened

Scientists long thought life in the deepest ocean trenches depended mostly on scraps of sunlight-fed life drifting down from above — but at 9,500 metres beneath the Pacific, researchers found whole communities of tubeworms and clams powered instead by m Spa...

Why it matters

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Key facts
  • Category: science
  • Edition: AE
  • Fetched: Fri, 26 Jun 2026 15:28:25 GMT

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