California Lake's Arsenic Hints At a Shadow Biosphere 155
MichaelSmith writes "Scientists think that there might be arsenic-based life in Mono Lake, California. If it's shown to exist, such life could have evolved independently from our own, or it could have forked from ours at a very early stage."
Arsenic life forms? (Score:2)
Arsenic life forms = Super rats (resistant to rat poison). Oh boy!
Re:Arsenic life forms? (Score:5, Funny)
Super rodents? I don't believe in them.
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I've heard there's one Super Rat who is a master of ninjutsu.
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The good news is said super rats have no appetite for our carbon-based non-arsenic containing foods.
The bad news is the super rats' excrement will fill the soil with the poison, eventually getting into the water and plants, and killing us all
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ALF
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I think you accidentally a word ?
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No I not!
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It's based on the following post:
hey
I accidentally 93MB of
what should I do...is this dangerous ?
Read more about it here: http://www.encyclopediadramatica.com/I_accidentally_X [encycloped...matica.com]
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[picard_facepalm.jpg] Stop posting!
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Is the word with spelled wrong intentionally to create an opening for some sort of TRIPLE FACEPALM? [feel free to imagine a 3armed picard link here]
Lol, arsenic genesis (Score:5, Funny)
God: let there be man!
Secretary: god, R&D's on the other line, they're saying they made a new breakthrough.
God: what kind of breakthrough?
Secretary: apparently, phosphorus is better than arsenic and it's less polluting. They're saying that the efficiency of ATP alone is worth the transition.
God: medamnit, why didn't they get this to me sooner, I just finished breathing life into this guy. Now what am I supposed to do with poor Adamus?
Secretary: well, our lawyers did some digging and found that the name infringes on some obscure company that caught wind of the project and are already demanding royalties. That, and the EPA is starting to regulate arsenic more vigorously.
God: *sigh* time to make some cutbacks *pumps shotgun*
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Nuuuuuuuuuuu!
It's a trap, Felisa Wolfe-Simon just wants to sell you Head and Shoulders [imdb.com]!
Hmm.. (Score:5, Insightful)
Arsenic and Phosphorus are quite similar, chemically; but I'm not nearly chemist enough to know if there are messy details preventing a suitably evolved biological system from substituting one for the other.
Though, this being the internet, I'm obliged to note that Chuck Norris already does.
Re:Hmm.. (Score:5, Informative)
Well for one, a great deal of biochemistry involves ATP in normal life forms that has little to do with energy transport. Proteins can be activated through phosphorylation by ATP. DNA is constructed using ATP and its base analogues. Glucose must be phosphorylated twice before it is done being biochemically broken down to reducing equivalents and CO2. These processes especially phosphorylation of proteins and DNA structure, all work because PO4 is the right size. A system based on AsO4 would have proteins and genetic structure much different than our own structurally speaking. Also, the triarsenate analogues could very well be markedly unstable.
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"Markedly unstable" = /exploding/ poison super rats ?
That'd be fantastic.
Re:Hmm.. (Score:4, Informative)
Well for one, a great deal of biochemistry involves ATP in normal life forms that has little to do with energy transport. Proteins can be activated through phosphorylation by ATP. DNA is constructed using ATP and its base analogues. Glucose must be phosphorylated twice before it is done being biochemically broken down to reducing equivalents and CO2. These processes especially phosphorylation of proteins and DNA structure, all work because PO4 is the right size. A system based on AsO4 would have proteins and genetic structure much different than our own structurally speaking. Also, the triarsenate analogues could very well be markedly unstable.
The Times article is dreadful.
Ronald S. Oremland of the USGS has been researching this for years. He is a fascinating speaker on the subject.
He has shown that there are microbes in Mono Lake that have an arsenic based metabolism.He and his team have elucidated a good part of the metabolic pathways involved Similar microbes are found in soil as well.
For a brief over view of the metabolism see http://microbiology.usgs.gov/geomicrobiology_arsenic.html [usgs.gov]
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That was too insightful a post to have needed to post anonymously.
From which we deduce that the poster just doesn't want to bother with a login, or already used a mod point on this story.
From the lack of dust on the monitor, we can further deduce that the poster keeps too busy to gather dust; and based on the IP address, packet history, and the traces of clay particles detectible on the third line of the post — a rare form of clay used only by coroners, biologists, and the Puppet Master — we kno
The important questions... (Score:5, Funny)
Can we eat them and are they tasty?
Re:The important questions... (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:The important questions... (Score:5, Interesting)
Makes me wonder if we would be as toxic to them as they would be to us...
Re:The important questions... (Score:5, Interesting)
Probably. Arsenic is toxic to us because of its chemical similarity to phosphorous. It reacts enough like phosphorous to get pulled into various reactions in our cells, and then enough differently to make the processes fail. In an organism that used arsenic instead of phosphorous, phosphorous would cause the same trouble.
Computer analogy -- In the old Eastern Bloc, clones of Western chips were reportedly made using "metric inches" of 25 millimeters instead of American inches of 25.4 mm. This worked fine electrically and mechanically when all the gear you were using was made to the same spec, but if you unknowingly tried to put a Western-made chip on 1/10th inch spacing into an Eastern Bloc socket on 2.5 mm spacing, or vice-versa, the incompatibility could cause failures. Similarly, it might be possible to build a cellular chemistry using arsenic instead of phosphorous. But if you put arsenic into a creature built with phosphorous or vice-versa, you're likely going to have failures as the cell unknowingly plugs the wrong element in.
Re:The important questions... (Score:5, Informative)
Don't put unleaded in a diesel.
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I'm sorry, I don't know these computers you speak of. Can you put that in a car analogy?
Don't put unleaded in a diesel.
Yeah, but where can you even get leaded gas these days?
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I'm sorry, I don't know these computers you speak of. Can you put that in a car analogy?
Don't put unleaded in a diesel.
Yeah, but where can you even get leaded gas these days?
Airports. Single engine propeller planes still use leaded gasoline.
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I thought about putting in something about $10/gallon 100 octane leaded aviation gasoline, but decided it weakened the joke.
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Maybe they're from Butter Dimension like Topato!. "I AM MADE OF POISON!"
Best link I can find with the text. http://www.wigu.com/overcompensating/2005/09/i-am-made-of-poison-and-xml.html [wigu.com] My favorite web comic ever. http://wigu.com/ [wigu.com] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wigu [wikipedia.org]
Karma be damned! If any story is worth a Topato plug, it's this one.
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They taste just like almond-flavored chicken.
Re:The important questions... (Score:5, Informative)
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Yes. no.
You only need a very small amount to be able to taste it (and bitter is a taste, almond is an smell).
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Poplers? Mmmm.
Made Robert Henke lose his hair (Score:3, Informative)
This Monolake? [monolake.de]
On an arsenic-based life form world (Score:5, Insightful)
The highly intelligent life would find it bizarre that some organisms would actually thrive in an atmosphere with such a dangerous and corrosive gas like oxygen.
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Or even worse, Carbon Dioxide, the Antichrist of the 21st century.
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Paper by Wolfe-Simon et al. (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Paper by Wolfe-Simon et al. (Score:5, Informative)
Well, the answer is still: No.
I just read TFA. (Yeah, I know, shame on me. ;)
And actually, she is just taking buckets of the water, diluting them so they contain more arsenic and less phosphorus, and adding sugar etc, to see if she finds organisms who then thrive.
But the point is: She still found nothing at all. She’s just taking water and playing with it.
Now of course I’m not saying that the theory isn’t true. Since we simply don’t know it yet.
So her work is good and I’m happy she does it.
Just... saying that there is arsenic life there... is just disingenuous. If you know what I mean.
But I bet she did not intent to be disingenuous. Instead I bet, that the media hype machine is to blame.
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The other thing that struck me about TFA is that maybe she is a bit limited in her approach: Sugars and vitamins are all fine, but just beacuse they're mostly beneficial to "actual" life doesn't mean that they are to (hypothetical) "alternate" life. Maybe she's inadvertently killing whatever stuff there is in her water buckets? She should try mixing in other stuff as well.
Come to think of it, small humans often react "Vitamins!?! Aarrrrgh!". They do seem to tolerate sugar pretty well though.
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In the article, Dr. Wolfe-Simon is not saying what she's found at all. The only thing she's vo
hugely increasing ? (Score:2)
"Dr Wolfe-Simon has taken samples from the mud and the waters of the lake and is performing a series of multiple dilutions — hugely increasing the levels of arsenic and reducing residual phosphorous to zero." [emphasis mine]
Shouldn't that read "greatly reducing"?
I'm not usually a linguistic pedant, lest I find myself hoist by my own pedantetry, but reading that sentence almost made my brain segfault: wait: diluting, causing an increase in something, toward zero? Arghhhh!
Amazing (Score:5, Interesting)
Finding an alternative pathway to the evolution of complex life forms could affect our perception of how common life is in the universe and could be a stunning treasure trove of discovery and insight for biologists.
This is sheer speculation so far! (Score:5, Insightful)
Tell you what: call us back when there is something to actually show us in this area. So far there is next to nothing but somebody's wild idea.
In the meantime, I have a theory of my own: all dinosaurs were thin at one end, much much thicker in the middle, then thin again at the other end.
Can I get a research grant please?
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For the same reason archea do: a fundamentally new form of life is of interest to us scientifically. Right now it's mostly speculation but that is why experiments are being done; to test hypotheses and support or discredit speculation on the subject. It is certainly worth looking into at the least.
Re:This is sheer speculation so far! (Score:4, Insightful)
There is as yet -- even according to the recent paper she wrote -- virtually no evidence that a lifeform such as this exists. Sure, I am interested in new scientific findings. But this isn't a finding! It isn't news. It's just speculation. I submit that until there is some kind of evidence, her theory is worth just as much as the one I mentioned above. I.e., nothing.
This article is not worthy of Slashdot. If I want to read speculations about unusual life forms, I can just go pick up a science fiction book at the local store, which in many cases will contain at least as much science as presented here.
And I guess, in a nutshell, that is my point: We are shown no science here. And until there is some, this article was worth no more to me than the science fiction book I mentioned before. Less, in fact. Novels at least tend to be entertaining.
Re:This is sheer speculation so far! (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:This is sheer speculation so far! (Score:4, Informative)
developing a methodology to search for something is usually considered publishable research in and of itself. (if said methodology is genuinely unique) the results (be they positive or negative) are often presented in a follow-up paper.
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That is very true, as a new methodology if tested workable, can pave the way for future research in itself.
Another reason to split the methodology/result in two papers is that usually (in my area) a paper is very limited in page count, so you usually have no space to present a method, prove that it's workable, present result, and analyze the result. You can either do two papers with decent explanations, or one paper that is unreadable and makes no sense because everything is horribly compressed. People usua
Re:This is sheer speculation so far! (Score:5, Funny)
Not worthy of Slashdot? ROFL. You must be have been asleep for the last 10 years.
Re:This is sheer speculation so far! (Score:4, Insightful)
You a) never worked in a scientific field and b) have no clue where scientific breakthroughs come from. Here's a clue: every single scientific breakthrough started in the same way: this is strange... I wonder if.... The big "proofs", the big shiny toys, the Nobel prizes are all the culmination of a long process that started with someone, somewhere going down a road that is based on sheer speculation. Many fail, a few succeed, but it all starts the same.
Yes, this is early. Yes, this is largely speculation. However, she does have a protocol, experiments that can produce data that can support her theory and a place where to start.
I'm glad science isn't done by bores like you, because we'd never get anything new.
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Okay, so she has a protocol. Let's call that something new (it may be). So then why isn't the article about the protocol -- the new thing -- rather than about the old ti
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I guess in the early 20th century a lot of people said the same about this weird thing called quantum physics that some people suddenly came up with.
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It's be known for years that there are bacteria and archaea in Mono Lake that integrate arsenic into their biochemistry. Nothing new here, except a Johnny-cum-lately researcher looking for a bit of hype, which dumb-ass science journalists are always ready to give.
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Archaea, by definition, are a fundamentally old form of life that has done very nicely for a few billion years.
Humans are ignorant; film at 11.
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I think that you'll find that the Archaea are, by definition, a group of prokaryotes that have certain specific wall structures, biochemical oddities, and environmental preferences. Things that can be readily measured. "old" is not something that can be readily measured (unless you've got a time machine with a built in Automatic Paradox Resolution Wombat).
It is proposed (though by no means universa
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Well okay but from the article:
But she hopes that her research may help scientists to reconsider what alien or “weird” life might look like: “It may prove that there are other possibilities that are beyond our imagination. It opens the door for us to think about biology in ways we have never thought. We are going to look for life on other planets and we only know to look for that which we know. This may help us to develop tools to look for something we have never seen.”
I think this is a good point because we are starting to get spectra from planets around other stars. If we find a planet with composition and other parameters similar to our own we may assume that life as we know it exists there. But life on these planets may not be as we know it, and we need to understand how it might work.
So yeah this is speculation, but I think it is worthwhile doing now.
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Despite the mods, my comment was not intended as trolling. There is nothing new here. This is an old idea she is re-hashing. Sure, it's (very) mildly interesting that she thinks she has an experimental way to verify the presence of something. But until there is some actual data, I'm simply not interested in rehashing such ancient ideas.
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What's new in this is the possibility of a life form to live in a highly poisonous condition, and breathe poison like us breathe air. This is very exciting indeed if she got some preliminary data (which she said she does) and publish it. Science fiction authors, on the other hand, do not bother to perform experiments and write papers. They just speculate. She is doing something with that speculation, with methods that are responsible and repeatable.
We have science and progress because of speculations like t
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That is my whole point here, which so many have seemed to have missed. This is NOT new. I come to Slashdot to learn about NEW things. I eagerly await the result
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Is this Sci-Fi-Same-as-Reality troll a new kind of Slashdot lifeform or has it existed for Eons beneath my notice?
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I think you're missing the point of the article.
It is NOT about poison-breathing animal found in science fiction. Its main point is the possibility that a SECOND BIOSPHERE, one that we are unfamiliar with and thus undiscovered, may exist on earth. IF we can detect the existence of the second biosphere, we have a greater chance of finding alien life, simply because all life-detection techniques that are being used today rely on the premise that ALL LIFE is oxygen-breathing, carbon-based like us.
The impact of
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You're now causing Jane to question herself. I think people that find you agreeing with them probably do that a lot.
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I was similarly modded into trolldom a short while ago for having the audacity to point to the fact that there is no direct evidence of evolution (I do, however, believe in evolution, just the same).
It couldn't possibly have been that you were merely ignorant, right? I mean, any questioning of your superior intellect and knowledge has to come from rubes who don't have a clue.
Wow, I wish I could be such a narcissist.
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But you know what? It's kind of fun to kick up a little bit of debae and try to get people to think a bit for themselves now and then, even at the risk of a few Karma points.
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Middle age will do that to ya
Yeah but she's calling the ball (Score:5, Insightful)
She's being a scientist of the most famous type - she's calling the play before hand. She's putting her reputation on the line, making a prediction, describing a means to test it, and then going to check it herself. She's arguing in the oldest of sense that her insight is right, and in doing so if she gets the job done and is actually right, she's going to be pretty darned famous.
This is far removed from a scientist making a droll statement based on a computer model. She's saying, there is another radically different kind of life on earth and that she is going to show us how to find it. It's worlds beyond cool. She's trying to be like Babe Ruth calling the home run before he does it, and the world just loves that sort of a thing. In a world where people live around the edges and fritter away at them, she's trying to kick open an entirely door. She gets it, and in a very intuitive and natural way, what a scientist is supposed to be - a leader, because their education gives them intuition born out by test, that shows us how to see new things. Life in a dead lake, alien to our own, how much more of a prediction do you need?
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Well, your theory is plagiarism! That's a Monty Python sketch. ... google google... seems the sketch I'm thinking of was about brontosaur... ii(?).
So, you posit that the theory on the brontosaurus could be generalized to all dinosaurs?
Interesting development...
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Yes, of course. :0) I was wondering if anyone would notice.
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The rock in question and others like it are indeed producing some really curious and stunning science. "Proof"? No, not yet.
I hate when that happens (Score:5, Funny)
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Well, as geobiologists it only seemed natural to host their projects on geocities.
Are we talking BSD ? (Score:1, Funny)
Goes and hide under a unixified rock now ...
A bit of a stretch (Score:1, Insightful)
There's zero evidence it's pure speculation. Also there's nothing saying a traditional life form can't adapt to arsenic. Unless it has a radically different biology it's likely just adapted to the environment. Other lifeforms here have adapted to use toxic agents. Silicone based life would be alien but simply using arsenic doesn't mean alien. One massive problem is the age of the lake. It would have had to have evolved in relatively recent times. It's kind of the Loch Ness Monster problem, it's just not tha
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there's nothing saying a traditional life form can't adapt to arsenic.
Thats true. The article points out that early life may have had the flexibility to adapt to wildly different environments.
Silicone based life
I know: women with breast implants!
It would have had to have evolved in relatively recent times.
Maybe it came out of a volcano [wikipedia.org]?
Volcanic activity persisted past 5 million years BP east of the current park borders in the Mono Lake and Long Valley areas.
Yeah its speculation, but interesting all the same.
Re:A bit of a stretch (Score:4, Interesting)
Just FYI, Mono Lake lies in an area that's still quite volcanically active, with many hot springs and fumaroles including a couple that can be seen right from U.S. Route 395, the main highway that runs through the region. In fact, the Long Valley area you mentioned is the caldera of a potential super volcano.
The whole area is also very beautiful in an almost other-worldly way. It looks sort of like one of the better Star Trek (TOS) sets.
I'll wait for the paper (Score:2)
Word up! (Score:1)
Arsenic? Mono? Shadow? Fork? Somebody has a sick sense of humor.
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<offtopic>
I try to avoid commenting on sigs, but shouldn't that be "gigue-ling"?
</offtopic>
Surprised (Score:3, Insightful)
There is Arsenic in a lake, in California, that might support a unique form of life.
To me, the most surprising thing is that California has not already declared it a disaster zone and spent $45 million trying to "clean" it up.
Re:Surprised (Score:5, Funny)
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Oh, that would be hi-larious. Any of you guys live near Mono Lake? Do it. Dooo eeeeet!
Exciting (Score:2)
That would be the coolest thing biologists ever discovered. Way cooler than the Sulfur-based life forms in the deep sea.
So much for the building blocks of life... (Score:2)
And we expect life on other planets to require oxygen, water, and carbon... when we don’t even know what life is here on earth...
According to Wikipedia, there are titan breathers, and even uranium breathers, who thrive in hot sulfuric acid.
So I fear that we will not even look at where we would find the first life. Or dismiss it as impossible to live.
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Citation please. So I can go and drag that article, kicking and screaming, (back) into some sort of contact with reality.
Shadow blogosphere? (Score:2)
Am I the only one who reads "blogosphere" every time he sees biosphere?
Are there arsenic-based bloggers out there talking about politics and trading arsenic-based biscotti recipes?
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Am I the only one who reads "blogosphere" every time he sees biosphere?
Sadly, no. I was expecting the article to be a conspiracy theory on some sort of blogosphere cabal that's been plotting to do something with arsenic.
So much potential, what is going on? (Score:2)
Shadow BIOS (Score:2, Funny)
Silicon vs Carbon and other possibilities (Score:2)
Re:Forked? (Score:4, Funny)
Damned open source projects. They didn't like the carbon license, so they made their own.
Next thing they'll be telling us, humans are a fork of monkeys.
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Re:Meanwhile (Score:5, Insightful)
Is that with no life still a lifeform?
Re:How did I get modded ? (Score:2)
You must be new here.