A species called Bacillus infernus has been cultured from core samples of Triassic siltstone, buried strata at least 140 million years old, drilled up from almost two miles beneath eastern Virginia. Under the Pacific Ocean, 35,755 feet deep in the Mariana Trench, lie sediments that have also yielded living bacteria. In Antarctica, a body of water known as Subglacial Lake Whillans, lidded by half a mile’s thickness of ice and supercooled to just below zero, harbors a robust community of bacteria. They thrive there in the darkness and cold, eating sulphur and iron compounds

