Archive for July 1st, 2008

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Published at the SCQ: Explaining Our World: Science VS Creationism

Tuesday, July 1st, 2008

My latest article is up at the Science Creative Quarterly:

Explaining Our World: Science VS Creationism.

My previous articles are still available there as well:

Tragedy of the Commons Explained With Smurfs

Science Fiction VS Fantasy: An Opinionated Guide

How To Fly

Enjoy!

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Putting Microbes to Work for Us

Tuesday, July 1st, 2008

civilization is a race between education and catastrophe.
- H.G. Welles

It took life on Earth millions years to figure out how to digest cellulose, the hard wall that makes up the cells of plants, efficiently to get at the energy inside it. In fact, complex lifeforms, such as Cows and Termites, have to take the indirect route of enlisting bacteria in their guts to digest the cellulose for them.

In one of the many many many asides he takes in his book A Short History of Nearly Everything, Bill Bryson talks about plastics being made of hydrocarbons found in oil and natural gas. Although plastics are non-biodegradable, there is a great deal of energy still stored in those hydrocarbons, just waiting for the right lifeform to evolve along and start consuming them.

There is now a continent-sized vortex of the Pacific Ocean swimming with plastic junk. Sea turtles and birds are mistaking plastic bags for jellyfish, ingesting them and dieing. Plastic particles are accumulating in the food chain, appearing, undigested, in the feces of seals and other animals.


Fallen Trees from the Tunguska Event

Plastic Bag Tree
Credit: spike55151

In his book, The Andromeda Strain, Michael Crichton fictionalizes a microbe that mutates to eat rubber. Today, numerous scientists and companies are engineering microbes to eat plastic, or more precisely, microbes with the ability to break down plastics to get at the bounty of hydrocarbons locked up within them.

Companies, like Verde Environmental and WonderChem, produce solutions of microbial cultures that eat oil, slowly. Recently, 16-year-old Daniel Burd, of Waterloo, recently isolated the microbes that eat plastic bags as a Science Fair project, earning him a $10,000 prize and $20,000 scholarship. His discovery may reduce the time it take to degrade plastic bags to just three months. A shovel-full of soil from anywhere on Earth contains millions of the oil-eating Pseudomonas bacteria. It’s just a matter of encouraging these microbes to be fruitful and multiply

The Law of Unintended Consequences comes into play at this point. Algae-like bacteria live in both diesel and biodiesel fuel, clogging up the engines they contaminate. Organisms like these have all ready ruined a large amount of Earth’s underground petroleum, leaving sulfer and methane as byproducts. A quick look at all the modern conveniences requiring plastics that we rely on give us a hint as to the pandora’s box we might be dabbling with here, meaning we might end up needing microbes to clean up the microbes.

There was an old lady who swallowed a fly…

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Science Etcetera, Marsday 20080701

Tuesday, July 1st, 2008
  • I want a gun that shoots these. Using laser beams and electric fields, Rice physicists pushed an electron to orbit far from the nucleus of a potassium atom, creating a millimeter-sized “Bohr Atom.”

  • Millimeter-Sized Atom

    Millimeter-Sized Atom
    Credit: Jeff Mestayer/Rice University
  • Perspective please. Fear of flying after 9/11 killed 1600 people who chose to make the much more dangerous choice of driving.
  • MIT Students have built a 12X12 foot parabolic mirror that can focus sunlight well enough to melt steel… theoretically.
  • The International Whaling Commission got nowhere, and Japan is considering quitting it so they can eat all the whales they want like a fat little piggy nation.
  • Stunning collection of photos of Earth from Space (HT Oranchak).

  • A cloud wake appears on the downwind side of Isla Socorro, Mexico

    A cloud wake appears on the downwind side of Isla Socorro, Mexico
    Credit: NASA Johnson Space Center
  • Wal-Mart and Costco are adopting redesigned milk jugs that are cheaper to ship and better for the environment. People hate them, but they’re gonna have to suck it up because it’s here to stay.
  • Using embryo selection, a couple will have a baby free of the breast cancer gene, removing the disease from their lineage. Now consider the truth in Clint’s prediction concerning humans evolving themselves.
  • Somebody please find me an audio sample of the Aztec Death Whistle, played by those about to be sacrificed.
  • Rock Dissolving Acid on Bare Human Skin: