Bacteria To Protect Against Quakes 81
Roland Piquepaille writes "If you live near the sea, chances are high that your home is built over sandy soil. And if an earthquake strikes, deep and sandy soils can turn to liquid with disastrous consequences for the buildings built above them. Now, US researchers have found a way to use bacteria to steady buildings against earthquakes by turning these sandy soils into rocks. 'Starting from a sand pile, you turn it back into sandstone,' the chief researcher explained. It is already possible to inject chemicals into the ground to reinforce it, but this technique can have toxic effects on soil and water. In contrast, the use of common bacteria to 'cement' sands has no harmful effects on the environment. So far this method is limited to labs and the researchers are working on scaling their technique. Here are more references and a picture showing how unstable ground can aggravate the consequences of an earthquake."
Now to pay for it (Score:1)
I hope they are not too successful (Score:4, Funny)
I hope their technique doesn't scale too far. Its hard to make sand castles out of sandstone without power tools.
Welcome to Malibu Rockpile. (Score:3, Interesting)
No harmful effects (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:No harmful effects (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:No harmful effects (Score:4, Insightful)
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Re:No harmful effects (Score:4, Insightful)
Oh humans! Messing with things we don't know aren't harmful. Things like this are nearly always used before they've had a chance to be researched thoroughly, leading to something going horribly, horribly wrong, like giant mutating monsters or zombies or alien attacks.
Maybe I've just been watching too many horror flicks.... Either way, I should hope these people would proceed with extreme caution. I don't like the thought of the soil turning into one big slab of sheet rock. Where would my food come from?
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The enormous difference between using bacteria and some non-organic agent, is that bacteria produce more bacteria and there is no saying whether you m
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You may give a toad a wart, but a toad may not give a wart to you.
-Harvey Denton, League of Gentlemen
http://www.lofg.com/character_profile.php?profile
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Mah. It's bacteria. If it gets too widespread, we'll just spray it with Lysol.
- RG>
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The terrifying thing about bacteria is that they not only reproduce, they mutate and adapt while preproducing.
History has quite a few examples of man's attempt to manipulate his environment by using 'organic' or 'natural' means, like introducing new species into an environment with no existing predators.
All actions have consequences, some acceptable, some not. Some are known beforehand, others found out after it's too late.
What if
Liquifaction (Score:1)
I was going to imagine a Beowulf cluster of these, but I lost my microscope
Research needed! (Score:4, Interesting)
Also I wonder how one would contain these bacteria, and stop them from spreading? I don't think we would want our beaches turned to stone...
I am generally very reserved when it comes to releasing living organism where they don't belong and/or trying to alter the environment. There are just too many factors involved, and there is no way we can cover them all!
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Why is it that we allow nature to run freely, in an uncontrolled manner, and think that's safe, but when things are done controlled, people get scared? Is this motivated by religion? Yes, there should be investigations on whether it is harmful, but don't be scared without reason.
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Primarily because humans have proven themselves to be remarkably adept at fucking things up, even when we have the best of intentions.
Nature "running freely" represents an equilibrium reached through 4+ billions years of physical and biological evolution here on planet earth. Now along come the humans, and before we even understand a fraction of a percent of
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Isn't the fact that so many environmental actions undertaken by humans have turned out to make things worse reason enough to be scared? We barely understand natural processes, or how they affect eachother. It seems to me that interfering with them is not a good idea unless it is absolutely necessary. Turning sand into stone to protect houses against earthquakes is just crazy... There is no emergency!
BUILD SOMEWHERE ELSE!
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The f
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I think it's a reasonable problem to try to solve. A lot of valuable buildings were built on sand. Moving the building is costly, and it doesn't make that much sense to do so for a sporadic event. My take is that something like this might be a decent way to stabalize such a building depending on how much effort it takes to feed and take care of such bacteria, It make turn out to be very unfeasible simply because you're attempting to keep fussy bacteria alive relatively deep in the earth while maintaining th
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Someone please tell this to the New Orleans peoples to save them from yet another disaster, it WILL happen...what idiot decided to build a city under the sea level near the bloody sea at a stormy region?!
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Exactly.
FTA: In contrast, the use of common bacteria to 'cement' sands has no harmful effects on the environment.
That should read "...has no *known* harmful effects..." Introducing species has a long history of unintended consequences. For example:
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You mean Brasil. The africanized bees have migrated to N. America all on their own, but they were originally introduced in Brasil in the 50's...
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IIRC, the mongooses killed a lot more than one bird out of ten.
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Jeez (Score:5, Interesting)
Sorry.
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Yeah but my sand has Bacteria in it to Protect Against Quakes, so its not so foolish.
Wierd? (Score:2)
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No (Score:2)
If only we could have found (Score:3, Funny)
This new learning amazes me, Sir Bedevere.... (Score:2, Funny)
You don't even need an earthquake (Score:2)
Lab workers save from earthquakes (Score:3, Funny)
Awesome.
Call me daft but... (Score:2, Insightful)
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Re:Call me daft but... (Score:5, Insightful)
Sorry, you must be new here. The way we do it is to encourage the wealthy to build mansions in unreasonable places and then bail them out from disasters with the public treasury, funded by broad-based regressive taxes.
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I was unaware that you can choose not to be born in San Francisco or Florida.
Escalation (Score:1)
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You have only yourselves to blame!
ladies and gentleman... the solution (Score:1)
Ob Hoenikker (Score:1)
potential fix for ground water problems in Boston? (Score:4, Interesting)
This is different (Score:3, Informative)
The bacteria process basically improves the shear response of the soil when it's under motion to prevent/reduce liquefaction. The problem in Boston is that buildings in Back Bay and along the Harbor are basically setting on water. Short of soil mixing under each of the foundation, there's not much that you can do to solve the problem you describe.
Re:potential fix for ground water problems in Bost (Score:2)
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It's an interesting problem for Boston, because they don't want to spend the money to fix things (they're more at the "let's dig more monitoring wells" stage), but those buildi
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Seriou
Oh great (Score:2)
Blinded by Science (Score:1)
Too late (Score:1)
Help for Venice? (Score:2, Insightful)
Alt. Construction..? (Score:3, Interesting)
Waves? (Score:1)
And if you'd asked a geologist ... (Score:1)
If you've inherited such a property, or have only recently started to think about defensive housing (in the same sense as "defensive driving"), then you need to keep your mouth very firmly shut until you've got the buye