 (Reuters)  – A lake in Argentina's remote, inhospitable northwest may  offer clues  on how life got started on Earth and how it could survive on  other  planets, scientists say.
(Reuters)  – A lake in Argentina's remote, inhospitable northwest may  offer clues  on how life got started on Earth and how it could survive on  other  planets, scientists say.                 
Researchers have found millions of "super" bacteria thriving  inside the  oxygen-starved Lake Diamante, in the center of a giant  volcanic crater   located over 15,400 feet above sea level.
The  bacteria's habitat  is similar to primitive earth, before living and  breathing  organisms began wrapping a protective atmosphere of oxygen  around the  planet.
The conditions -- which include high  arsenic and alkaline  levels --  could also shed light on life beyond Earth.
"This is of great scientific interest as a window  to look to our past  and also for a science called astrobiology, the  study of life on other  planets," said Maria Eugenia Farias, part of the  team that discovered  the life-forms in Lake Diamante earlier this  year.
If bacteria can survive here,  the theory goes, it could also survive  somewhere like Mars.                  
So-called "extremophiles" have  been found in other parts of the world --  and they can have   significant commercial value. Bacteria that break  down lipids are used  in detergents for example.
significant commercial value. Bacteria that break  down lipids are used  in detergents for example.
 significant commercial value. Bacteria that break  down lipids are used  in detergents for example.
significant commercial value. Bacteria that break  down lipids are used  in detergents for example.
But Farias said these  bacteria, called "polyextremophiles" are  exceptional because they  flourish in the harshest of circumstances.
"What  we have here is a series of extreme conditions all in one place.  And  this is what makes this place unique in the world," said Farias, a   microbiologist at the National Scientific and Technical Research Council   in Tucuman province.
The lake sports levels of arsenic 20,000 times  higher than the level  regarded as safe for 
The bacteria's DNA  mutates to survive the ultra-violet radiation and low  oxygen levels  found at such high altitudes, which could make it of  interest to the  pharmaceuticals industry, Farias said. It could also  have future  commercial applications in products such as sunscreens, she  added.
Farias and her team are looking for  Argentine funding to produce a  metagenome of the bacteria, an advanced  study which provides a DNA  sequence of the entire microbe colony.
This would enable her crew to study the  bacteria in Argentina and help  ensure that the South American country  keeps hold of potentially  lucrative patents for new antioxidants  or enzymes  that could be derived  from the bacteria.
 
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