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Nanobes - Life may be smaller than you think

kris writes "The existence of nano-sized organisms has been proposed for a number of years by geologists who refer to a range of mineralised structures in rocks as the fossil remnants of nanobacteria. Bacteria range in size from 150nm (Mycoplasmas)-50m in diameter while the proposed nanobacteria are an order of magnitude smaller with diameters reported to range from 20nm-150nm. How small can life be? See for yourself at the Nanoworld Image gallery. Can we build computers from microbes and nanobes? Or has this already happened in precambrian times? "

1 of 5 comments (clear)

  1. Dammit, I tried to post a story about this today by Kaufmann · · Score: 2

    Seriously, I think this would deserve index.pl!

    Anyway, here's what troubles me. The largest atoms are about what, 10^-11m, right? So one of these thingies would be merely 2000 to 15000 atoms in length - about the length of some common complex organic molecules. How can a structure be so small and still qualify as alive?

    Of course, if it can, that means that we can also build artificial assemblers at least that small. That's very cool.

    --
    To the editors: your English is as bad as your Perl. Please go back to grade school.