Blog Search
Archive
Blog Statistics
  • Views: 3670029
  • Articles: 1366
  • Comments: 1027
  • Status: Public
  • Who's Viewing: 3
  • Guest
  • Guest
  • Guest
3 Guests  0 Members
Posted by duddy   May 27, 2013   3689 views

Researchers from McGill University in Montreal have discovered a bacterium living in the frozen permafrost of the high Arctic. The permafrost bacterium, Planococcus halocryophilus strain Or1, grows and divides at -15°C and can even remain metabolically active at -25°C.

This bacteria is yielding clues about how extraterrestrial organisms might endure extreme conditions - as one of the things that makes it extremely hard for life to flourish in foreboding places like Mars and the moons of Saturn is the punishing cold. ...

mars
Posted in News
1 Comment | Write Comment
1
I cannot wait for the day when we find a microbe like this on Mars and/or other planets. They are so amazingly resilient and adaptive! Reading articles like this make me proud to be a microbiologist!
Posted on May 28, 2013 by savio
Posted by duddy   May 26, 2013   2801 views

This is the Great Blue Hole of Belize in Central America, and at 300 metres across and 124 m deep, it's thought to be the largest submarine cave on Earth. It was first discovered by French explorer Jacques Cousteau, and was formed over a period of around 140,000 years when the sea levels were much lower than they are now. As the sea levels rose, a number of limestone caves were flooded over time to create this almost perfect circle. It's now home to several species of fish and reef shark.

Posted in Uncategorized
No Comments | Write Comment
Posted by duddy   May 26, 2013   3208 views

By manipulating chemical gradients in a beaker of fluid, the behavior of crystal growth can be controlled, creating precisely tailored structures – “flowers” at the scale of microns – that bloom in a beaker.

Though these minuscule sculptures don't resemble the cubic or jagged forms normally associated with crystals, they “bloom” from the surface of a submerged glass slide, assembling themselves one molecule at a time.

The precipitation of the crystals depends on a reaction of compounds that are diffusing through a liquid solution. The crystals grow toward or away from certain chemical gradients as the pH of the reaction shifts back and forth. The conditions of the reaction dictate whether the structure resembles broad, radiating leaves, a thi ...

chemistry flowers crystals
Posted in Uncategorized
1 Comment | Write Comment
1
Impressive, but who's actually paying to research this stuff? Like seriously, is this really that important to study Neutral Face
Posted on May 26, 2013 by savio
Posted by bio_man   May 25, 2013   3573 views

flowers climate
Posted in Videos
1 Comment | Write Comment
1
I always wondered how they go from yellow to the? white fluff! Thanks for posting Slight Smile
Posted on May 26, 2013 by savio
Posted by bio_man   May 25, 2013   3403 views

Posted in Jokes
1 Comment | Write Comment
1
Posted on Jul 1, 2013 by doseofmegan
« 1 ... 259 260 261 262 263 ... 274 »
Random Article
   RSS Feed     Atom Feed     RDF Feed