Friday, December 3, 2010

Mono Lake

Nasa news

English: Yesterday NASA found a whole new life form! In Salt Lake Mono Lake in California have an organism called GFAJ-one been found, they live of arsenic instead of phosphorus. Previously it was believed that all living creatures need phosphorus to survive … But, now it was obviously wrong, and th. ...more...

NASA Finds New Life
"NASA has discovered a new life form, a bacteria called GFAJ-1 that is unlike anything currently living in planet Earth. It's capable of using arsenic to build its DNA, RNA, proteins, and cell membranes. This changes everything. NASA is saying that this is "life as we do not know it". The reason is . ...more...

Mono Lake

Bakterien som lever på arsenik
Kvinnor kan: Apropå den sensationella upptäckten av bakterien GFAJ-1 som lever på arsenik. After days of rampant speculation that NASA was on the cusp of revealing it had detected extraterrestrial life, the reality was slightly more down-to-Earth. A team of scientists revealed Thursday that they had. ...more...
NASA entdeckt neue Lebensform - hier das erste Bild

Yep, es ist eine kleine Sensation. Ein bisher unbekanntes Bakterium im Mono Lake in den USA stellt die Forschungswelt auf den Kopf. Dieses Ding ernährt sich nämlich vom fr den Menschen hochgiftigen Arsen. Diese Entdeckung bedeutet nun enormen Auftrieb fr die Suche nach Lebensformen auf der Erde und . ...more...

NASA finds new form of life... on Earth

Bacteria that thrive on arsenic have been scooped from a California lake, a discovery that redefines the building blocks of life and offers new hope in the search for other organisms on Earth and beyond. Not only do the bacteria survive, they grow by swapping phosphorus for arsenic in their DNA and . ...more...

ensue es using hot water to rinse rule. build enounce then using cold water kills bacterial?
If i were to do that over and over a gather will it kill most of the bacteria in my enounce ? Other Oral Rinse Sites Mono Lake bacteria produce their DNA using arsenic (and no, this isn't about aliens) | Not Exactly Rocket Science | Discover Magazine ...more...

No comments:

Post a Comment