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Published 16:10 23 May 2022 BST
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Via NASA[/caption]
Via NASA[/caption]
'These large animals are living in what you have to assume is much hotter and much more acidic water,' ocean engineer Brennan Phillips told National Geographic. "It makes you question what type of extreme environment these animals are adapted to. What sort of changes have they undergone? Are there only certain animals that can withstand it?"
Speaking to the New York Post, Kadie Bennis from the Smithsonian Institution's Global Volcanism Program said that seeing life around active volcanoes is not unusual.
"We see it all the time, where even just on the surface, there are people in cities built around volcanoes, or there's this volcanic mouse species that like to live around other sorts of volcanoes in different parts of the world," she said. "So it's completely normal for there to be sharks and other marine life around underwater volcanoes since it's also just contributing to the ecosystem that way."

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