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Ice age bacteria brought back to life
www.NewScientist.com ^
| 2/25/2005
| Kelly Young
Posted on 02/25/2005 12:57:59 PM PST by aimhigh
A bacterium that sat dormant in a frozen pond in Alaska for 32,000 years has been revived by NASA scientists.
Once scientists thawed the ice, the previously undiscovered bacteria started swimming around on the microscope slide. The researchers say it is the first new species of microbe found alive in ancient ice. Now named Carnobacterium pleistocenium, it is thought to have lived in the Pleistocene epoch, a time when woolly mammoths still roamed the Earth.
NASA astrobiologist Richard Hoover, who led the team, said the find bolsters the case for finding life elsewhere in the universe, particularly given this week's news, broken by New Scientist, of frozen lakes just beneath the surface of equatorial Mars.
..Excerpt..
(Excerpt) Read more at newscientist.com ...
TOPICS: News/Current Events; US: Alaska
KEYWORDS: archaeology; bacteria; climate; ggg; godsgravesglyphs; history; mammoth; mammoths; mammothtoldme; pleistocene; science
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To: nuffsenuff
Destroy it? It will be placed on the Endangered Species List and protected!
21
posted on
02/25/2005 1:08:41 PM PST
by
CobraJet
To: aimhigh
If something bad happens, we all know who's in the White House and who the MSM will go after.
22
posted on
02/25/2005 1:09:21 PM PST
by
DTogo
(U.S. out of the U.N. & U.N out of the U.S.)
To: aimhigh
Yeah, NOONE has immunity to this microbe.
Wouldn't it be funny if this is the microbe that cause massive extinction...oh wait. Maybe not.
23
posted on
02/25/2005 1:09:26 PM PST
by
sandbar
To: aimhigh
A bacterium that sat dormant in a frozen pond in Alaska for 32,000 years has been revived by NASA scientists.And upon seeing the movies nominated for Academy Awards this year, promptly went dormant again.
24
posted on
02/25/2005 1:10:03 PM PST
by
Doctor Stochastic
(Vegetabilisch = chaotisch is der Charakter der Modernen. - Friedrich Schlegel)
To: nuffsenuff
25
posted on
02/25/2005 1:10:10 PM PST
by
Barney59
(Now there's a man with an open mind - you can feel the breeze from here!)
To: nuffsenuff
What could go wrong? Sounds like the 1950's movie, "The Thing". Of course, it is probably classified as an endangered species, so we can't destroy it.
To: aimhigh
Perhaps now we will finally find out for sure what killed the dinosaurs.
27
posted on
02/25/2005 1:11:03 PM PST
by
tarator
To: pabianice
It's listed as having voted in Chicago as a Democrat last year...CA Democrats commented that we aren't spending nearly enough federal funds to rehabilitate this most needy of all life forms.
To: aimhigh
29
posted on
02/25/2005 1:12:05 PM PST
by
DoctorMichael
(The Fourth Estate is a Fifth Column!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!)
To: dahicks
I'd rather have them bring it to life in a controlled and contained lab and learn about it than have some speciman thaw on its own and get into circulation without warning.
To: dahicks
they really shouldn't be tampering with things they don't understand.
I can appreciate your caution however, there are many things we would not have today if somebody decided not to fool with "things they don't understand."
To: aimhigh
Just what I was thinking. Defrost these bugs and you never know what you get.
32
posted on
02/25/2005 1:16:57 PM PST
by
hershey
To: aimhigh
If it ain't broke, don't fix it!
33
posted on
02/25/2005 1:17:06 PM PST
by
rintense
To: Barney59
Hey Barn. Better go tell Miss Krump about this.
34
posted on
02/25/2005 1:18:27 PM PST
by
Graymatter
(There are times when the Rule of Law needs an override.)
To: aimhigh
Science has thawed out the bacteria that caused the extenction of the Wolly Mammouth! Yippeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee!!!!!!
35
posted on
02/25/2005 1:19:37 PM PST
by
F.J. Mitchell
(If the left hates you, you are obviously right.)
To: sandbar
The % of bacteria that cause human disease out of all the bacteria species in the world is microscopic.
We're all constantly bathed in bacteria all the time.
To: aimhigh
I can see the headlines now: "Disney opens Pleistobacterium Park on Remote Arctic Island."
37
posted on
02/25/2005 1:22:30 PM PST
by
ManHunter
(You can run, but you'll only die tired...)
To: mysterio
"The bacillus sample was 250 million years old. That's the current record holder."
But.. but.... the Earth is only 5,000 years old! [/lunatic]
38
posted on
02/25/2005 1:23:00 PM PST
by
NJ_gent
(Crouch down and lick the hand that feeds you; and may posterity forget that ye were our countrymen.)
To: nikos1121
will the same science work to get hair growing again?Only a billiard ball.
39
posted on
02/25/2005 1:23:24 PM PST
by
yankeedame
("Born with the gift of laughter and a sense that the world was mad.")
To: aimhigh
"Another interesting article: "Prehistoric bacteria revived from buried salt" by J. Travis in Science News Volume 155, June 12, 1999, p. 373. In this article, J. Travis has interviewed such men as William D. Rosenzweig and Russell H. Vreeland of Penn. University who have now announced to have isolated and revived bacteria from salt deposits that is 250 million years old. Also in the paper, a researcher is mentioned, who is said to have been ahead of his time claimed, back in the 1960s, to have revived bacillus and other bacteria from salt deposits more than 500 million years old.
40
posted on
02/25/2005 1:23:50 PM PST
by
blam
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