Today at 2pm there will some sort of press release or announcement regarding a discovery in the field of extra terrestrial life.Might be something about water on other planets or might be something to do with the search for plants outside our solar system. Gonna be fun though.
12/2/2010 9:17:51 AM
These are always exciting, I hope it's at least bacteria
12/2/2010 9:27:23 AM
I hope it's only bacteria. Anything more advanced then that and someone will either want to harvest it for capital gain or see it as a threat and want to obliterate it.
12/2/2010 9:29:18 AM
there are 1000s of things worth harvesting out in the solar system already. they're just not worth getting to (yet)[Edited on December 2, 2010 at 9:41 AM. Reason : f]
12/2/2010 9:41:00 AM
To be fair, if there is any kind of life my people will find a way to worship it as a deity.
12/2/2010 11:05:50 AM
Still pre-press conference, but some info is coming out:http://gizmodo.com/5704158/nasa-finds-new-life
12/2/2010 11:31:30 AM
SAY WHAT!?!?!
12/2/2010 11:36:05 AM
It was discovered in a lake in california. Non DNA based life form so really pretty cool but not an "extra-terrestrial".
12/2/2010 12:19:18 PM
Some would argue that California is like another planet.
12/2/2010 12:27:28 PM
kinda disappointing, was hoping for discovery of life on an extrasolar planet.
12/2/2010 12:31:09 PM
this is a huge deal for evolutionary biology and geneticsbut has nothing to do with extraterrestrial life or other planets.just shows that even the basic structure of DNA can evolve in extreme conditions.
12/2/2010 12:38:45 PM
I wonder how NASA got involved with this then. I agree, this is an amazing discovery that is going to shake the fields of biology, but since it apparently evolved here on Earth in a toxic lake, I'm not sure how they got involved.
12/2/2010 12:57:03 PM
12/2/2010 1:11:22 PM
What kind of crazed Planet of the Apes meets Dawn of the Dead scenario are we going to see when these things evolve into monkeys?
12/2/2010 1:17:15 PM
^^^ opens up more possibilities for life on other planets that have hostile environments which we wouldn't normally consider could have life.i guess you could say there's even a possibility of life on Venus with it's dense atmosphere of toxic gas.[Edited on December 2, 2010 at 1:19 PM. Reason : ]
12/2/2010 1:18:43 PM
They got Bill Nye about to explain this shit on CNN.
12/2/2010 2:11:00 PM
Do you guys never check CC?
12/2/2010 2:34:30 PM
^I never do at work, way too risky.This is a pretty big deal if everything in the press release turns out to be true. The PI making the announcement was a little annoying and short on details, so hopefully we will learn more once they start publishing. For those in biology and genetics, it definitely is one of those "where were you moments".I was a little disappointed to hear that they believe it to be the result of a substitution instead of a second abiogenesis, because that would have been even more monumental.
12/2/2010 4:29:12 PM
So where's the link to the press release? Or a cut/paste job...Also,
12/2/2010 4:40:17 PM
nothing new to see here folks. we've known about this for a long time...[/unc fan]
12/2/2010 5:31:06 PM
12/2/2010 6:01:46 PM
It's not as Earth-shattering as you may think; they took a sample of bacteria that already survived in arsenic-laden soil, gave them an environment with plenty of arsenic and no phosphorus, and noticed that some of them survived by using arsenic in place of phosphorus...but the arsenic-filled bacteria had plenty of empty space even though they took up about 60% more volume, and once returned to a phosphorus-rich environment they eschewed arsenic in favor of phosphorus.BTW when people ingest arsenic, it does something similar, except that for some reason we end up dying instead of becoming more metal to the core.
12/3/2010 3:16:47 AM
you need to go read the wikipedia page on arsenic poisoning if you think it does something similar in our bodies LOL
12/3/2010 3:33:50 AM
I am pretty sure NASA knows more than they are telling us when it comes to ET Life.
12/3/2010 8:48:11 AM
12/3/2010 9:48:19 AM
this just proves that god can create life in any form and that science is always playing catch up to him.
12/3/2010 9:49:47 AM
OMG really...no actually it explains how adaptable life is and how it can EVOLVE to survive even the most hostile environments, even changing its own DNA. I think this is a pretty spectacular event. Way to go 2010...just this summer humans designed the very first synthetic living cell and now we have a new life form which could give us insight into how the first COHNP DNA based life evolved out of our primordial soup.
12/3/2010 11:06:56 AM
12/3/2010 11:08:25 AM
^^I am certain that Shaggy was being sarcastic.
12/3/2010 11:37:46 AM
^^^^http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Progressive_creationismthose crazy creationists!!
12/3/2010 11:56:25 AM
Yeah I didn't add "but there are actually people that would say that shit."
12/3/2010 1:47:48 PM
12/3/2010 2:08:27 PM
Did anybody ever come across this in September?http://www.news.com.au/technology/sci-tech/panspermia-theorists-say-indias-red-rain-contains-life-not-seen-on-earth/story-fn5fsgyc-1225913620448
12/11/2010 6:49:03 PM
12/11/2010 7:23:10 PM
^^ wasn’t there an X-Files episode about that?
12/11/2010 9:56:45 PM
http://news.yahoo.com/s/yblog_thelookout/20101208/sc_yblog_thelookout/scientists-poking-holes-in-nasas-arsenic-eating-microbe-discovery
12/12/2010 4:39:10 AM
Good Lord, NASA can't get a break.They land on the moon, and people say they lie about it.They claim a (largely) minor breakthrough in research regarding a new find in (terrestrial) biology, and people say the lie about it.So they can't go too big or too small, or else people will call them fakers. I have at least a little trouble believing that the government is spending that much money to make shit up, especially in the latter case where it is so unimpressive to so many people.
12/12/2010 5:11:47 AM
The 'doubters' in this case are so highly qualified and are using such strong, accusatory language (and that's rare) that they can't be overlooked.This is not a fake moon landing conspiracy theory.
12/12/2010 5:25:23 AM
Yeah, I'm thinking that this is more of NASA being desperate for relevance than trying to make stuff up. Funding isn't as good as it used to be and they are quickly becoming forgotten. This had potential to be a huge discovery, and they need it big time. So the jumped the gun.
12/12/2010 11:34:50 AM
Hmm. this is actually serious criticism.it struck me as odd, that such a major discovery was purely by nasa astrobiologists without any support from traditional geneticists and/or microbiologists who work in this field daily. but like everyone else, i was caught up in all the excitement to suspect any sort of shenanigans.this actually is detrimental to science. we already have enough problems from anti-science fundamentalists pushing their agendas as "alternate theories". the last thing science needs is unscrupulous researchers putting out halfassed crap. [Edited on December 13, 2010 at 11:29 AM. Reason : ]
12/13/2010 11:29:08 AM
^ I can see it working for both sides.In a sense, this is a triumph for science. People published bad research, and the scientific community puts an end to it pretty quickly. That's exactly what it is supposed to do. It's evidence that the process works.On the other hand, it's ammunition for folks who like to point out how even venerable institutions and people can go really, really wrong. They'll say that similarly flawed research can come out in fields where the research is less easily tested and duplicated. Then the scientific community (because of all the familiar bugaboos - reliance on gov't funding, academic inbreeding, etc.) would be much less reliable for correcting itself.And both are right.[Edited on December 13, 2010 at 12:13 PM. Reason : a]
12/13/2010 12:12:44 PM
I think it's just a case of peer-reviewed science proving yet again it's self-correcting mechanism.
12/13/2010 12:37:57 PM
^, ^^ tru. good points.
12/13/2010 3:23:51 PM