Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Emerging Tech
  3. News

Tiny animals discovered in Antarctic lake deep beneath the ice

Add as a preferred source on Google

Scientists have made a surprising discovery in Antarctica: the carcasses of tiny animals were found in a lake that sits deep beneath one kilometer (0.6 miles) of Antarctic ice.

The scientists were drilling into Subglacial Lake Mercer to look for evidence of life, though finding tiny animals was “fully unexpected” according to David Harwood, a micro-palaeontologist at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln and a part of the expedition. The Subglacial Antarctic Lakes Scientific Access (SALSA) mission progressed from previous studies that looked at the lake through ice-penetrating radar and other remote-sensing techniques, by melting a portal through the ice and into the water of the lake below.

Researchers used a hot-water drill to bore through a kilometer of ice, creating a portal with a diameter of just 60 centimeters. Billy Collins/SALSA Science Team

The animals the team discovered in the underground lake included crustaceans and a tardigrade, also known as a water bear. When they looked at samples from the lake through a microscope, they saw “some things that looked like squished spiders and crustacean-type things with legs … some other things that looked like they could be worms,” Harwood told Science News. Strangely, some of the creatures that they discovered were land-based animals, like the eight-legged tardigrade which tends to live in damp soil, and the creatures that looked like worms were actually tendrils from a plant or fungus that lived on land.

Recommended Videos

The team believe that the creatures lived in ponds and streams in the Transantarctic Mountains, which lie roughly 50 kilometers (31 miles) from Lake Mercer. This was during a brief warmer period when the glaciers of Antarctica receded to reveal the lake — which is calculated to have occurred either in the past 10,000 years or a massive 120,000 years ago. It is unknown how the creatures came to be in the lake in distant Antarctica, but it is known that as the warm period ended and colder temperatures returned to the region, huge sheets of ice formed over the lake and preserved and isolated it. It could be that rivers under the ice washed the creatures from the mountains down into the lake, or it could be that the creatures were frozen into a glacier and were dragged away from their mountain home.

This is the first time that life of this complexity has been found under the ice sheet, as previous research had found microbes in Lake Whillans, which is 31 miles from Lake Mercer, but never higher life.

Georgina Torbet
Georgina has been the space writer at Digital Trends space writer for six years, covering human space exploration, planetary…
Home robots can already walk. The hard part is stopping them from crushing your glassware
1X’s NEO uses tactile sensing and force control to handle fragile objects, aiming at the kind of household work humanoids still struggle to do.
Baby, Person, Electronics

A robot can look convincing while walking across a stage and still be useless in a kitchen. Picking up a wet glass demands precision, quick corrections, and enough restraint to avoid squeezing too hard. 1X is tackling that problem with new tendon-driven hands for NEO, its humanoid home robot.

1X says each hand has 25 degrees of freedom, with 22 across the fingers and palm and another three in the wrist. Its joints can yield when pushed instead of staying rigid, giving NEO a better chance of handling household objects without treating every collision like a wrestling match.

Read more
This tiny gadget called Moodi could save your thumb during long reading sessions
This tiny remote thinks your finger deserves a vacation
DuRoBo Moodi

Digital reading has become more comfortable thanks to larger displays and e-paper screens, but one small annoyance remains: constantly reaching over to tap or swipe every page. DuRoBo believes it has a solution. The company has unveiled Moodi, its first Bluetooth page-turning remote, designed to make reading, browsing, and media control more comfortable across e-readers, tablets, and smartphones.

Unlike conventional page-turners that focus solely on e-books, Moodi doubles as a compact Bluetooth remote for scrolling through articles, controlling multimedia playback, and navigating long-form content. The device looks towards ergonomic accessories that aim to reduce repetitive hand movements during extended screen time.

Read more
Camera sensor breakthrough promises sharper images without hulking up your phone’s thickness
Camera sensors just got thinner. Your excuses for blurry photos didn't.
Representative Image

Researchers at Nagoya University have developed a new type of transparent optical sensor that could significantly reduce the size of camera sensors while improving image quality. Published in the journal ACS Nano, the study demonstrates how gallium-doped zinc oxide (GZO) nanosheets can detect red, green, and blue (RGB) light within a single pixel, potentially replacing the decades-old Bayer filter design used in nearly every digital camera today.

If commercialized, the technology could enable thinner smartphone cameras, higher-resolution medical imaging devices, and more compact sensors for automotive and aerospace applications, all while simplifying manufacturing.

Read more