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originally posted by: andy06shake
a reply to: MichiganSwampBuck
Of course, i am, i could do no less.
But that's not the point, the salient one being nature doesn't entertain any of our constructs.
Nature is a force that follows rules, rules like phi, pi, and a few other constants that dictate how reality transpires and unfolds from the micro to the macro scale.
What makes you think we are better than maggots considering the pile of stinking dung we have made a significant proportion of the planet?
originally posted by: firesnake
I finished reading Cold Storage by David Koepp (Jurassic Park) this week, involving a long dormant fungi retrieved from space - similar to the other thread (I can't find it) about using fungi to cover and protect the ISS from radiation. In the story it runs wild and learns to spread itself through hosts using different adaptations of chemicals.
Between these and the search for microbes on Mars and in Antarctica my mind is running wild with questions and ideas. Not sure that microbes on their own could spread so dangerously though.
originally posted by: LSU2018
originally posted by: vonclod
originally posted by: LSU2018
originally posted by: TheConstruKctionofLight
a reply to: 727Sky
Should be titled "Scientists revive microbes older we guess than 50,000 years from deep underground"
Lately I can't seem to get an straight answer how any can guess the age of things older than 50,000 years
www.abovetopsecret.com...
wiki radiocarbon dating
Carbon dating is unreliable for objects older than about 30,000 years, but uranium-thorium dating may be possible for objects up to half a million years old, Dr. Zindler said.
I don't know how they can date, semi-accurately, anything older than a few hundred years unless there's a date stamped on it.
Radio carbon dating is fairly accurate, there are other methods for dating geology, they can't radio carbon date these microbes, they must be using geological methods/timeframe.
How is a good question on the microbes, but Radio Carbon is well established for shorter timeframes.
I'm not trying to argue about it. I just don't see how, without the use of a time machine for verification, a 1,000,000 year old rock can be dated accurately and known without the shadow of a doubt that the date is accurate. Who's there to say "Yep, the carbon date is correct and I know without a doubt that this rock right here is 1,003,466 years old."? Nobody, that's who. It's all just a guess.