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NASA find new lifeform: arsenic microbe widens likelihood of extraterrestrial life - SlashGear |
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Topic: Science |
9:31 am EST, Dec 3, 2010 |
NASA’s curiously worded press release earlier this week about an event later today prompted speculation that the space agency had discovered extraterrestrial life; going by a leak ahead of conference, it’s actually something about as alien as you can get from physiology as we know it, only on this very planet. According to NOS, NASA has found a new type of bacteria in Mono Lake, California, which lives with levels of arsenic in its biology that were hitherto believed impossible.
NASA find new lifeform: arsenic microbe widens likelihood of extraterrestrial life - SlashGear |
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MIT Researchers Harness Viruses to Turn Water Into Hydrogen Fuel | Inhabitat - Green Design Will Save the World |
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Topic: Science |
2:18 pm EDT, Apr 12, 2010 |
A team of researchers at MIT has just announced that they have successfully modified a virus to split apart molecules of water, paving the way for an efficient and non-energy intensive method of producing hydrogen fuel. The team engineered a common, harmless bacterial virus to assemble the components needed to crack apart a molecule of water, yielding a fourfold boost in efficiency over similar processes.
MIT Researchers Harness Viruses to Turn Water Into Hydrogen Fuel | Inhabitat - Green Design Will Save the World |
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Incan Counting System Decoded? |
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Topic: Science |
12:40 am EST, Feb 3, 2004 |
] According to De Pasquale, the circles in the cells are ] nothing but the first numbers of the Fibonacci series, in ] which each number is a sum of two previous: 1, 2, 3, 5. ] ] ] The abacus would then work on a base 40 numbering system. sounds pretty cool, if unverifiable for the time being. Incan Counting System Decoded? |
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Regrow Your Own Broken heart? No problem. New liver? Coming right up. The road to regeneration starts here. |
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Topic: Science |
9:19 am EDT, Oct 21, 2003 |
] Why? It's an evolutionary mystery. The ability to regrow ] legs and eyes seems like a clear Darwinian advantage - ] one that surviving generations would have retained. But a ] paradox of regeneration is that the higher you move up ] the evolutionary chain, the less likely you'll have the ] ability to regrow limbs or organs. Keating's mission: ] figure out the cause of this paradox - and reverse it. I wonder if giving the cells in a complex organism this kind of regenerative power makes them more likely to become cancerous, and so complex organisms with this feature died out from that. U: This is what I get for not finishing the article before memeing... They discuss this possibility... Regrow Your Own Broken heart? No problem. New liver? Coming right up. The road to regeneration starts here. |
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