Nasa found Aliens
Okem
4,617 Posts
Unsurprisingly in California.
http://gizmodo.com/5704158/
Hours before their special news conference today, the cat is out of the bag: NASA has discovered a completely new life form that doesn't share the biological building blocks of anything currently living in planet Earth. This changes everything.
At their conference today, NASA scientist Felisa Wolfe Simon will announce that they have found a bacteria whose DNA is completely alien to what we know today. While she and other scientists theorized that this could be possible, this is the first time that this has been confirmed. Instead of using phosphorus, the bacteria uses arsenic. All life on Earth is made of six components: carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, oxygen, phosphorus and sulfur. Every being, from the smallest amoeba to the largest whale, share the same life stream. Our DNA blocks are all the same.
But not this one. This one is completely different. Discovered in the poisonous Mono Lake, California, this bacteria is made of arsenic, something that was thought to be completely impossible. The implications of this discovery are enormous to our understanding of life itself and the possibility of finding beings in other planets that don't have to be like planet Earth.
No details have been disclosed about the origin or nature of this new life form. We will know more today at 2pm EST but, while this life hasn't been found in another planet, this discovery does indeed change everything we know about biology. I don't know about you, but I've not been so excited about a bacteria since my STD tests came back clean.
http://gizmodo.com/5704158/
Comments
Doh.
^^ good article
crap article:
didn't know fatass bloggeurs rolled deep in the mariana trench or had total omniscience.
No, I think you were right. Always amazes me that NASA gets excited by possible traces of, say, water on the moon/Mars etc because it means that life may exist. The possibiity that water / phosphorous / suphur etc may not be prerequisite for all life forms seems to have passed them by.
Ha ha! I read it and thought it said "Nas found ATLiens" and I was like, "Really? He'd never heard it before?"
The fact that a new/different strain of bacteria exists in A POISON LAKE, and is unlike any bacteria discovered on our planet up until now is not nearly as exciting as they make it out to be.
This form of life is completely independent of every form of life we have studied to date.
It implies that life has been sparked into functional organisms multiple times (not necessarily on Earth) - which is no mean feat. It implies that evolution has happened across multiple strings, and that there may be completely unpredictable forms of life out there that have developed.
What could go wrong?
Now we know life can survive in most any environment. Above boiling, below freezing, with no light, no oxygen...
That life exists elsewhere and we are determined to contaminate it is a given.
This story, about life in the earths crust deep under the Atlantic -deeper than it was thought possible for life to exist, also just came out this week, or last.
"The organisms have been known to feed off methane and benzene in order to survive; a similar feeding pattern we see at oil well and contaminated soil. Several species settle there and reproduce at a temperature of 102 degrees Celsius.
Read more: http://scienceray.com/biology/life-discovered-deep-within-the-earths-crust/#ixzz16zm9P2yI"
I'm no biologist but can't it also mean that an independent life form exists in this "Poison Lake" that is physically unlike any other environment on our planet? That this particular form can't exist anywhere else besides in this "poisonous" environment might explain why it's never been seen anywhere else on earth before.
The implications are kind of staggering. For example, this really puts a wedgie in the Creationist theory, as I understand it. That even if humans evolved from simpler forms of life, it was exquisitely designed and planned that way to result in dumb Bieber-loving humans (who incidentally will soon be ravaged by an appocalypse for doing things like loving the Bieber). I think this is called the Watchmaker analogy.
We have also been basing much of our search for life on other planets on the assumption that phosphorus is essential (I think). This implies that other places in the universe (and on Earth) that we didn't think could create or sustain life might do.
I'm not an expert on this stuff, though. I could be wrong!
b/w
Give a Monkey a Brain and He'll Think He's the Center of the Universe.
It's definitely fascinating....although I don't think Creationism really needs any more nails in it's coffin to be pronounced dead.
But I'm not one to think the outrageous before exploring all the possible 'common sense" answers....This may just be a life form that has been around the same amount of time as all the others but was rendered close to extinct and only survived in this unusual/unique media.
Whenever you comment on science it seems like you don't understand it. Scientists don't think they completely understand everything, and they understand that their theories will change as they learn more. Biologists are excited about this discovery because it means things are even more interesting and complicated than they originally understood it to be. It means they will all have jobs because there are things that need to be understood better.
No scientist thinks that their theory is complete. They all know that they don't understand everything. That's why it is exciting.
To which I would add that it is speculation that is ego-based, not observation.
b/w
Monkeys already have brains.
um, NASA gets excited about traces of water in space because while you are correct that water/phosphorus/sulfur may not be a prerequisite for life, they are prerequisites for organisms/life as far as we can detect. until this bacteria, there was no life on earth that could survive without phosphorus.
completely independent? the bacterium has shown the ability to replace phosphates with arsenates. its growth is significantly slowed by this process and when phosphates are reintroduced, its growth goes back to being normal. its exciting, dont get me wrong, but its more three card monty than an independent form of life.
Would you eat a fish caught in Mono Lake??
b/w
No fish can live in it's waters and that's why it's referred to as "poison".
http://pipeline.corante.com/archives/2010/12/02/life_with_arsenic_whod_have_thought.php
yeah, you're right - i was being over-excited with "completely independent". so if i understand you right, this is something that they think mutated from something already evolved?
oh wow - that's a very different scenario than i imagined from the earlier (brief) press reports earlier today.
what are some other Cosmos-esque tunes?