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right|thumb|300px|Thermophiles produce some of the bright colors of Grand Prismatic Spring, [[Yellowstone National Park]] A thermophile is a type of extremophile that thrives at relatively high temperatures, between . Many thermophiles are archaea, though some of them are bacteria and fungi. Thermophilic bacteria are suggested to have been among the earliest bacteria.
right|thumb|300px|Thermophiles produce some of the bright colors of Grand Prismatic Spring, [[Yellowstone National Park]] A thermophile is a type of extremophile that thrives at relatively high temperatures, between . Many thermophiles are archaea, though some of them are bacteria and fungi. Thermophilic bacteria are suggested to have been among the earliest bacteria.
Thermophiles are found in geothermally heated regions of the Earth, such as hot springs like those in Yellowstone National Park and deep sea hydrothermal vents, as well as decaying plant matter, such as peat bogs and compost. They can live at high temperatures, whereas other bacteria or archaea would be damaged and sometimes killed if exposed to the same temperatures.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).