www.ExoticRainforest.com
----- Original Message -----
From:
ted.held@us.henkel.com
To: Discussion of aroids
Sent: Thursday, May 24, 2007 2:53
PM
Subject: [Aroid-l] More on those Silly
Fungi
OK Steve, I know about
thermophiles and the alternate energy source of sulfides. The eating of
"poisons" is not all that far out. After all, methanogen bacteria and
sulfur-reducing and anaerobic bacteria have been known for a long time. For
many anerobes the regular atmosphere is poisonous. But I am pretty sure that
no living organism can stand a fresh temperature of 800F (I assume F) without
death. I know that these beasties live NEAR hot temperatures, but I don't know
if anyone has measured the sustained temperature of their flesh. I mean, I can
amaze little children by passing my fingers through a candle flame. No biggie
there - except to the children who have never seen it done.
Ionizing radiation is another bag
altogether. I wrote a note to one
of the PhDs listed on the author list asking if he was the author and if the
nutshell information was correct. I'll let the list know if he writes
back. Ted.
"ExoticRainforest"
Sent by: aroid-l-bounces@gizmoworks.com
05/24/2007 03:06 PM
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Re: [Aroid-l] OT: Fungi that eat
ionizing radiation?
Ted, Far be it
for me to discredit or vouch for any of this! But I did find it
interesting due to another interest dear to my heart. I'm one of less
than a thousand people in the world who can document having logged over 5000
scuba dives. My time in the water as a professional underwater
photographer included time in a deep submersible. Never got to go down
to the deep water in the mid-Atlantic rift or the really deep water off
Galapagos but I recently saw a National Geographic special which featured deep
ocean dives to both areas of the ocean where live volcanoes are constantly
spewing on the ocean floor. The National Geographic team found large
incredible marine life actually using the noxious gasses produced by these
volcanoes as a food source. And to top that, many were living in water
with a temp approaching 800 degrees! Some were photographed crawling
into vents so hot it was actually burning them alive and they were happily
gathering and eating the stuff!
Nothing ought to be able to live in complete darkness, with
extremely high temperatures while using "poisons" as food, but they do!
So I don't have any idea if anything in this article is factual, but
apparently life can and does exist in places we would not have previously
expected it to survive. Perhaps the "Blob" exists as well!
Steve Lucas www.ExoticRainforest.com ----- Original Message -----
From: ted.held@us.henkel.com To: Discussion of aroids
Sent: Thursday, May 24, 2007 9:37 AM
Subject: Re: [Aroid-l] OT: Fungi that eat ionizing
radiation? I looked a little
at this reference and I am putting myself down as a skeptic. This paper looks
to have been published without peer review through funding from George Soros.
Neither of those is proof by itself, of course, but it makes the
scientifically minded put on the brakes a little bit. I was interested in the
claim that living fungi were found growing inside Chernobyl and I clicked on
the reference indicated in the paper, at the NIH, and no article was listed
there. The site was, in fact, the NIH site, but there was no article. This
blunder would never happen in a peer-reviewed paper.
Then there's the whole idea that
some living thing (defined according to how that is understood by those of us
who live on Earth) can not only survive ionizing radiation but utilize it to
perform life functions. I have watched certain effects of ionizing radiation
(x-rays) on formerly living materials and would be surprised if melanin could
even withstand ionizing radiation without charring all the way to carbon, much
less "eat" it. Then, of course, the life form would have to have some cell
structure to support the melanin and make use of the energy products
therefrom. Big doubts. Ionizing radiation is severe stuff. And my understanding of the
Chernobyl reactor is that it is now encased in concrete and nobody with any
sense goes anywhere near it. But they have robots in there that are able to
retrieve samples? And some researchers at Albert Einstein have these samples
and are conducting research, also using ionizing radiation? And word of such a
discovery did not make it onto the evening news?
I don't have time to pursue this
further, but it smells like "fringe" science. That is to say, a hoax. There is
a lot of this kind of stuff on the internet. You have to be
careful. Ted.
Steve Marak
Sent by:
aroid-l-bounces@gizmoworks.com
05/24/2007 12:03 AM
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[Aroid-l] OT: Fungi that eat
ionizing radiation?
A bit off topic, but I know others
on the list like these things too ...A post today on one of the bulb
lists I follow gave a link to a"fascinating-if-true" paper on the
possibility that some fungi can use ionizingradiation as a direct energy
source in a way similar to plant's use of visiblelight. An
abstract is
at:http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2007-05/aeco-erd051607.phpand
the full paper seems to be available online at PLoS ONE
at:http://www.plosone.org/doi/pone.0000457Ok, it's not exactly
"The Blob", but the part about melanized fungi colonizingthe walls of the
damaged Chernobyl reactor has at least a bit of those old1960's science
fiction "B" movies about it. If it were April 1, I'd assume it was a joke
... but I admit I hope it's true. Steve-- Steve Marak--
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