Scientists find a type of seaweed that's survived since the ice age

Kelp forest
Image caption,

This is a type of kelp forest!

Scientists have found a type of kelp that's around 16,000 years old - yes, that is sixteen thousand!

A team from Heriot-Watt University think the type of seaweed has survived since the last Ice Age.

It's hoped the discovery could help scientists discover how marine plant life survives extreme changes in climate.

They found it off the coast of Scotland, Ireland and around Brittany in France.

Image source, Getty Images
Image caption,

There is said to be 20 million tonnes of kelp in Scottish waters

One of the marine ecologists described the finds as "refugee populations that managed to hang on and survive amid dramatic changes as ice sheets retreated".

He added: "Kelp plays a critical role in the Atlantic so it is important to understand what affects its distribution and survival over time and how sensitive it is to change."

Image source, Getty Images
Image caption,

Fish and molluscs call the kelp forests home

There are around 30 different types of kelp, and the one that scientists found in this case is called oarweed.