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Group of Microbes Change Dissolved Gold to Solid

option8 writes " National Geographic, has a an article about a newly discovered strain of bacteria that might be used (though, as the article says, not cost-effectively) to harvest gold and other metals from seawater - a longtime fantasy of science fiction."

2 of 126 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Why not use tides ? by dragons_flight · · Score: 5, Informative

    A lot of bacteria that are found in exotic environments, such as hydrothermal vents, aren't horribly happy when moved far away from those environments. (After all if they were competitive in other places, you'd expect them to show up more widely in the ocean).

    The article doesn't say, but they may require high temperature, high pressure, or unusual mineral solutions in order to grow and do their thing. This naturally leads to higher costs, at the very least causing you to pump water through some tank designed to keep them happy. Some of the bacteria used in environmental cleanup etc, are actually genetically modified versions meant to survive in environments other than where the trait developed. Of course on the other hand we might get lucky and they do like sitting on the beach churning out gold.

    If it can be made profitable I'm sure someone will do it.

  2. Redox! by Negadecimal · · Score: 4, Informative

    Everyone seems to think these bacteria are simply coagulating dissolved gold metal, something you could do by simply by letting water settle.

    They're not.

    The bacteria are reducing the gold from an ionized salt form (Ag+) to solid gold. That would take a bit more effort (and a ton of water pollution) for a laboratory to accomplish.