When we think about Antarctica, the first thing that comes to mind is the pristine white and light blue hues reflected in all white ice-covered regions, receiving almost negligible sunlight all year round. But something that people would least expect to spot is red liquid and too frozen in the form of waterfalls!
Sounds gross and gothic - straight out of a zombie or vampire sci-fi, but it’s actually true!
Since 1911, explorers and scientists have stared at this rusty red streak pouring from Taylor Glacier, wondering what eerie force could have created such a sight in a land of endless white.

Blood red waterfalls in Antarctica? What is the secret behind the bizarre colour of the 'gothic falls' (Photo via Wikimedia Commons)
A red waterfall in a white world
Blood Falls flow from Taylor Glacier in Antarctica's McMurdo Dry Valleys, spilling crimson water onto the ice below. Spotted in 1911, this rust-coloured stream baffled experts for decades with guesses like red algae or sediments.
The salty, iron-rich brine stays liquid under pressure despite subzero cold and turns red fast in air, as explained in a Futura-Sciences article.
But what gives this standout colour to the waterfalls?
In 2023, Ken Livi's team at Johns Hopkins used high-res electron microscopy to spot amorphous iron nanospheres in the brine, published in Frontiers in Astronomy and Space Sciences. These non-crystalline particles, missed by old X-ray tests, oxidize instantly in oxygen, creating the red hue from clear water, per the study via JHU Hub. It's not gothic blood, it's just like hidden rust bombs activating on exposure!
Life without light, warmth, or much oxygen
Deep under the glacier, microbes in hypersaline, oxygen-poor water use iron and sulfur for energy via chemosynthesis, isolated possibly for millions of years.
This ancient ecosystem survives totally dark and cold, as noted by Polar Tours. It proves life adapts in spots lethal elsewhere, reshaping views on habitability.

Source: National Geographic
What is the significance of Blood Falls beyond Antarctica
Blood Falls are similar to Mars-like conditions, salty, cold, isolated brines under ice. NASA teams study the falls as an analog for Martian subsurface life or Europa's oceans, suggesting similar microbes could lurk there. It's a real-world test for space exploration dreams.
A clearer picture of extreme ecosystems
Advances in imaging technology have revealed how rocks, salty brine, and microbes interact deep under the ice, cracking a mystery over 100 years old. Blood Falls are more than a weird spectacle; the fall is solid evidence of tough life forms thriving on Earth and a hint for hunting extraterrestrial biology, as covered by National Geographic.