Group of Microbes Change Dissolved Gold to Solid 126
option8 writes " National Geographic, has a an article about a newly discovered strain of bacteria that might be used (though, as the article says, not cost-effectively) to harvest gold and other metals from seawater - a longtime fantasy of science fiction."
Re:Job satisfaction (Score:2, Interesting)
Who says that the biologists don't already know how to program? Quite a few biologists consider programming (or at least scripting) an essential skill these days -- analyzing thousands of pieces of data by hand is no fun. And as for job satisfaction, contributing to the knowledge of humanity is way more satisfying than working for some soon to be defunct Web portal...
Excellent! (Score:1)
Check those links before you submit! (Score:3, Funny)
cost efficient (Score:2, Funny)
Heh, I'll give you a miracle of science too. Give me two bucks and presto! I'll give you back one.
Re:cost efficient (Score:3, Interesting)
See, they are useful anyway.
Re:cost efficient (Score:1)
Illuminati. (Score:2)
Here's a brilliant idea.. (Score:3, Funny)
Its called "boiling". I once heard it described on TV..Apparently, you take a liquid, and you make it so hot that liquids turn right into gas!! Since water boils at 212'F and sodium dissolves at around 800'F, all you'de have to do is take a bucket of seawater, put a heat source beneath it, and wait!
This article gets my Most Dumb-Ass Article Of 2001 nomination. Its so dumb-ass you'de think Hemos was the one who posted it. Oh wait... he did post it. Hrm.
Cheers,
You can get the dumbass post of the month award... (Score:1)
Of course, spending the money to boil a liter of water to get less than 1 ppm of gold is a great money maker.
When the electrons are passed to or from the gold in the water, the gold is oxidized or reduced (depending on the state its in), and the gold is changed to its solid form. Although the article is wrong, its not like oxygen we breathe, because we don't reduce or oxidize oxygen.
Re:You can get the dumbass post of the month award (Score:1)
Wow, this is fantastic... (Score:3, Funny)
Maybe not seawater (Score:5, Insightful)
The microbes might not be economically viable at extracting gold from seawater, but that doesn't mean that they're useless. A clever engineer could probably figure out a way of using the microbes to cheaply process low grade ore. That's currently done using environmentally dangerous processes like cyanide heap leaching (which is as dangerous as you'd expect a process using large amount of cyanide to be) but a microbe that has an affinity for gold could make that type of work much safer and more environmentally friendly. Yes it would take quite a bit of work, but gold is still valuable enough that people are likely to look into it.
Re:Maybe not seawater (Score:2, Informative)
Enormous potential.
A million microbes? (Score:2, Insightful)
Just let them breed for a few hours and you'll have billions
Who gives a shit about the whales (Score:1, Insightful)
Why not use tides ? (Score:3, Insightful)
Why not use tidal forces to pump the water ? Or even just wave power.
Re:Why not use tides ? (Score:1)
Re:Why not use tides ? (Score:5, Informative)
The article doesn't say, but they may require high temperature, high pressure, or unusual mineral solutions in order to grow and do their thing. This naturally leads to higher costs, at the very least causing you to pump water through some tank designed to keep them happy. Some of the bacteria used in environmental cleanup etc, are actually genetically modified versions meant to survive in environments other than where the trait developed. Of course on the other hand we might get lucky and they do like sitting on the beach churning out gold.
If it can be made profitable I'm sure someone will do it.
Re:Why not use tides ? (Score:1, Informative)
You couldn't just let the bacteria escape into the ocean. It's not simply a matter of lowering a cage of bacteria into the ocean - you'd need to put the seawater in with the bacteria, leave it to work for a few days at least, then filter out the millions of tiny bacteria and put them in a box. (It's much similar to the technique used to produce insulin with genetically modified bacteria, only with gold instead of insulin.)
After all that, you're left with a tank maybe the size of a swimming pool full of sea water - and there's maybe only a milligram (or LESS) of gold in the whole thing.
Suffice to say, it's rarely worth it unless you're sure there's a whole bunch of Au dissolved in your patch of the Atlantic.
gold in sea water (Score:5, Interesting)
Genetic Use? (Score:3, Interesting)
Something fishy (Score:2)
There must be something wrong here. A glass of water could probably hold billions of microbes. So it could produce thousands of grams of solid gold? Seems like a good deal to me.
Re:Something fishy (Score:2)
The microbes aren't made out of gold, they find the gold and lump it together.
So, yes, you could fit the microbes in a glass of water. The gold? There's not even a millimicrogram of gold in your drinking water.
It would take billions of liters to produce a sizable amount of gold.
Re:Something fishy (Score:2)
Oh no. (Score:3, Funny)
The dissolved metals in seawater are supposed to be there. They are ions, positive or negative ions that play an electrochemical and a biochemical role in that ecosystem.
Gold is a very useful industrial metal, but it makes more money for the gold-miners when the gold is used as jewelry instead. Why not address the cultural roots of the gold-scarcity issue; making it less valuable in the market place by abating the jewelers' love for it would free up much existing gold for industrial use.
Most countries currencies are off the gold standard anyway.
Re:Oh no. (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Oh no. (Score:2)
Re:Oh no. (Score:2)
That's happening. And the World Gold Council [gold.org] is trying to slow it down. The price of gold is way down from the peak. Gold is down about 75% in constant dollars from the peak in the 1970s. There are closed gold mines all over the world, ready to reopen if the price goes up. And central banks have been selling off gold ("why are we storing this stuff?").
The World Gold Council is trying to prop up the price with a campaign along the lines of the "Diamonds are Forever" campaign that the DeBeers Central Selling Organization ran for decades. It's not working.
The difference between women and men (Score:1, Funny)
You could see in my k5 diary, if it were up, that I have a cute new hair-do and it makes jerks of both genders hit on me on the way to work.
Thus far, nobody who is not a) obviously insane b) drunk or c) hideous ever hits on me for some reason.
So, I could be doing something tonight but I would rather promote the magnificent website of which I am a part [adequacy.org] than deliberately spend money doing stuff with someone boring and dumb.
Besides, what are YOU doing trolling weblogs on a friday night?
-perdida
uses (Score:1)
Re:uses (Score:1)
Oh yes. Uranium is soooo dangerous. It's about 600 times more common in the Earth's crust than Gold is (~2 ppm vs ~3 ppb). Good luck precipitating all of it out.
Reminds me... (Score:3, Interesting)
Redox! (Score:4, Informative)
They're not.
The bacteria are reducing the gold from an ionized salt form (Ag+) to solid gold. That would take a bit more effort (and a ton of water pollution) for a laboratory to accomplish.
Re:Redox! (Score:1)
First observations compared to a reasoned response (Score:2, Insightful)
When I thought a bit further, though, I found this to be actually a VERY bad thing. The wealth/borrowing power of a nation is measured by its wealth (where gold is one of the primary methods of determining wealth). If this is an easy way to obtain new gold (where cost to get the gold is >= the gold gained), this could literally cripple the economies of the countries of the world. Heck, someone with a lot of money to blow and a "beef with the world" could drop some money into this in the hopes that this could happen.
Re:First observations compared to a reasoned respo (Score:1)
Re:First observations compared to a reasoned respo (Score:1)
I believe it was William Jennings Bryant who stated something like "You shall not hang the nation on a cross of gold", or something like that...
Re:First observations compared to a reasoned respo (Score:4, Insightful)
If I remember my early 20th century history correctly (and I might not), Bryant wanted free and unlimited minting of money. This would have made it easier for farmers (his chief supporters) to pay off their debts (small farmers then had the same problems as small farmers now), but would have made inflation rampant.
Bryant would have wanted these microbes because his understanding of economics sucked. His understanding of evolution sucked, too (he was part of the prosecution in the Scopes Monkey Trial). Hell of a public speaker, though
-jon
Re:First observations compared to a reasoned respo (Score:1)
Re:First observations compared to a reasoned respo (Score:1)
cost-ineffective? (Score:1)
You could use windenergy in order to pump the water or make use of the meganism of the tides.
Re:cost-ineffective? (Score:1)
Nitpicky (Score:3, Insightful)
Incidentally, Arthur C. Clarke wrote about using genetically engineered coral to extract gold from seawater in his 1975 book "Imperial Earth". However, the coral were extremely fragile, and eventually were only maintained as a curiosity.
Jobby
Re:Nitpicky (Score:1)
Here's to you Arthur!
Re:Nitpicky (Score:1)
Mine Reclamation (Score:1)
Group of microbes? (Score:1)
...you think that's cool (Score:1)
Paranoid Thought (Score:2, Insightful)
Admittedly, this is far-fetched, but I imagine that even an inert substance like gold must affect the ecosystem, But then again, Maybe the amount that would be extracted is still tiny compared to the sea-water reserves. How much gold is in that water?
Re:Paranoid Thought (Score:1)
Re:Paranoid Thought (Score:1)
Ever seen gypsy-moths feast on a forest?
Bugs from remote places (Score:1)
Heard it on NPR (Score:2)
Seems that they are looking at these critters for extraction of Radioactive material in water for nuclear cleanups at Hanford and Rocky Flats. I recall they can pretty much work with any metal, and they think that these guys are the reason there were/are gold/silver flakes in river and stream beds.
If I rember it right, and since I can't get on the link...thats all I have...you get these things going in a pond with radioactive sediments after a while they'll accumulate big enough flakes that you can strain it out.
There is talk about using them on the piles (cubic miles) of debris from gold and silver mines like Homestake and the mines in Colorado and California, as well as cleaning up copper mines in Montana, Wyoming and Utah.
How nobel... (Score:2)
... to think of harvesting metals for profit, instead researching the potential to de-toxify the environment, or even an organism that suffers from metal poisoning.
Granted, gold is extremely harmless to humans when ingested (relative to lead and mercury), but still...
Alfred Bester (Score:1)
How to make a goldfish. (Score:3, Funny)
Duh! It takes about 10 minutes for microbes to divide to make a million.
You design a slightly larger organism to eat these microbes.
Then, you design a fish that eats the slightly larger organism.
Then you have a goldfish! It's easy.
Re: How to make a goldfish. (Score:1)
Oh yeah, and I forgot to say that you release the young fish from the inside of an empty bank vault at the top of a stream.
The fish are genetically engineered to be like salmon, so they come back to where they were born. When they come back, heavy with gold, you just close the vault doors.
Metals from seawater NOT science fiction (Score:4, Interesting)
Magnesium hydroxide can be cheaply extracted from brine by precipitation when a cheap alkali is added - usually slaked lime (calcium hydroxide). The magnesium hydroxide becomes the feedstock for electrolytic cells which produce metallic magnesium. This second step is similar to the way that metallic aluminum is produced from aluminum hydroxide, after it is refined from bauxite. At one time, most of the world's magnesium was produced this way, though it may or may not be now - there are other practical sources. It is sufficient to say that the cost of electrolysis for magnesium production greatly outweighs the cost of the hydroxide feedstock, regardless of the source.
Uranium can also be produced from seawater, by various methods, but the cost is very much higher than either current world prices (very low right now) or even historical peak prices. It *is* however, *definitely* not too expensive for breeder reactor usage (breeders yield ~100 times more energy per unit mass of natural uranium). And there is something like 500 - 1000 times more uranium dissolved in seawater than all current, proven reserves in conventional mines.
In addition, I believe several other, non-structural metals are or can be produced from seawater. Rubidium, cesium, strontium, barium are perhaps possible. The amounts available is *usually* vastly larger than mine reserves.
Clearly, calling metal extraction from seawater "science fiction" is quite inappropriate.
Gold from seawater - an old dream (Score:1)
Quick! Patent the Microbes! (Score:1)
Kewl! (Score:1)
Re:Kewl! (Score:1)
I wonder, if I drank enough of this would I shit gold bricks?