Scientists Resurrect 40,000-Year-Old Worms Buried In Ice (gizmodo.com) 125
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Gizmodo: Earlier this month, in the journal Doklady Biological Sciences, a team of Russian scientists announced they had apparently discovered ancient nematode worms that were able to resurrect themselves after spending at least 32,000 years buried in permafrost. The discovery, if legitimate, would represent the longest-surviving return from the cold ever seen in a complex, multi-celled organism, dwarfing even the tardigrade. The worms were found among more than 300 samples of frozen soil pulled from the Kolyma River Lowlands in Northeastern Siberia by the researchers. Two of the samples held the worms, with one from a buried squirrel burrow dating back 32,000 years and one from a glacier dating back 40,000 years. After isolating intact nematodes, the scientists kept the samples at 68 degrees Fahrenheit and left them surrounded by food in a petri dish, just to see what would happen. Over the next few weeks, they gradually spotted flickers of life as the worms ate the food and even cloned new family members. These cloned worms were then cultured separately, and they too thrived.
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The scientists didn't resurrect anything. The worms just thawed out and weren't dead.
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Good luck resurrecting an auroch or a Bali tiger. These worms were merely hibernating.
They should try resurrecting the Jurassic Blue parrot . . . it's just resting . . .
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it is more likely that the dems will bring trump into office for a 3rd term
And in other news... (Score:4, Funny)
I was recently fortunate to have an extraordinarily cute, 20-something science student resurrect a 53-year-old worm buried in her....um, never mind.
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Ignoring the support structure benefitting said worm would have negative consequences, and is therefore something to be avoided.
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Let’s not open that can of worms.
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48 year old Slovenian model keeps that worm alive
Haven't you seen X files? (Score:1)
Haven't you seen X files?
I want that placed ERASED.
Bet... (Score:2)
For most of the World (Score:2)
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I'm not sure what your point is. The number of times I talk about phase transitions of water - pretty low. And then I really only care if there may be ice on the road. Number of times I pay attention to the outside weather, or the thermostat, pretty often.
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Plus you can just imagine all the lawsuits from angry Americans who pressed the button in the night too many times without thinking. Next time just pay the extra for a European room, you will appreciate the difference.
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I've noticed s lot of them still keep the internal temp in degrees C and just show it in F
You can see the 9/5 if you count along when you press the buttons repeatedly.
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Good point, and that brings up the question of error bars. At 68 F one would assume that it was accurate within half a degree Fahrenheit, at 20 C one would assume it was accurate within 5 degrees Celsius. That's a big difference.
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No one would assume 5 degrees. Commercial temperature controls for reptiles in a terrarium are more precise about that.
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We aren't talking about controls here, but about a news article. And I can easily imagine an editor rounding 24.5 degrees to 20 degrees.
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Yup. A lot of cooking recipes have either converted Celsius or converted and rounded Celsius in them. They start standing out once you notice them.
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As long as the internal measure is in floats or rationals it would hardly matter.
FWIW, I use both Fahrenheit and Celsius, depending on what I'm thinking about, and sometimes Kelvin. Use the tool that fits the problem. And the thermostats that I'm familiar with can easily switch the display from Celsius to Fahrenheit or back. I rarely see one that handles Kelvin, though.
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So do I, when I'm buying.
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Metric people don't do fractions. They decimalize things. No one likes that. I like eight farthings to the half shilling. Get off my lawn!
Would it be twelve farthings to the half shilling (or did you just disprove your own point)?
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68 deg F == 20 deg C
You mean there are places where this isn’t true?
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68 deg F == 20 deg C
You mean there are places where this isn’t true?
Basing something on the melting and boiling points of water is a moving target as the atmospheric pressure changes. So yes.
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No they don't. And I'm also sure that the official definition of temperature for BOTH scales talks about standard pressure rather than sea level. And that standard pressure is defined in a way that is not geocentric.
Still, it was based around geocentric concerns in both cases. The refinements are due to concerns about the standard not remaining fixed over time. (But the real problem has been [recently] the precise definition of mass, i.e. the Kilogram, since the pound has been redefined to be based on t
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Basing something on the melting and boiling points of water is a moving target as the atmospheric pressure changes. So yes.
Which is why the Celsius scale is based on melting(*) and boiling points at a pressure of 1 atm. So no.
(*) Yeah, I know that was redefined to use the triple point of water
Re:WHY? (Score:5, Interesting)
It tells us things about how long life could potentially travel through space. It is a bit hard to run a lab-experiment for 40'000 years...
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Well, it gets colder, but once your frozen, getting colder just increases the shelf life. Radiation is a problem, but the insides of meteors are shielded from it somewhat.
Re: WHY? Arrgh!! Homonyms! (Score:2)
Well, it gets colder, but once you're frozen, getti...
Watch out! (Score:2)
If you ignore this warning, Trump will be your president forever.
Fitting nick (Score:1)
politicizing basic science makes you look like a bit of a d
Yikes (Score:2)
I've seen this X-Files episode, we're all doomed (Score:1)
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These guys not watch the X-Files "Ice" episode? (Score:1)
This reminds me of the episode where scientists unearth ancient parasitic worms from the ice that cause them to murder each other?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ice_(The_X-Files)
Not a good idea!