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Single Microbe May Have Triggered the "Great Dying"

An anonymous reader writes with an excerpt from Medical Daily about a new theory for what triggered the "Great Dying: " "Researchers believe that they may finally know why the event occurred, but the theory is not without controversy. There are several theories, including the possibility of a meteorite hitting the planet. Previously, most researchers believed that the Permian mass extinction was a result of a series of volcanic eruptions in what is now Siberia. ... However, Daniel Rothman from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology is floating around a different theory. As he presented in a meeting for the American Geophysical Union, he believes that the mass extinction could have been caused by something much smaller. His theory is that the extinction was caused by a single strain of bacteria."

171 comments

  1. The kaboom by Dexter+Herbivore · · Score: 5, Funny

    But where's the Earth shattering kaboom? There's supposed to be an Earth shattering kaboom!

    1. Re:The kaboom by VortexCortex · · Score: 0

      But where's the Earth shattering kaboom? There's supposed to be an Earth shattering kaboom!

      Then, due to the sheer amount of frustration at the lack of bacterial extinctions requiring massive detonations, Dexter's entire head exploded in aneurysm causing what can only be described as a minor "Earth Shattering kaboom!"

      Here Lies Dexter Herbivore
      "It's the little things that count."

    2. Re:The kaboom by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Volcanic eruptions that last millions of years could count as a kaboom.

    3. Re:The kaboom by bmo · · Score: 3, Funny

      Obviously the Illudium Pu-36 Explosive Space Modulator was stolen by a rabbit.

      "It obstructs my view of Venus"

      --
      BMO

    4. Re:The kaboom by gmuslera · · Score: 3, Insightful

      That will be done by the cause of the Second Great Dying, this time will be something a bit bigger than a microbe, in fact will look a lot like us.

    5. Re:The kaboom by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      do you write for dinosaure comics ?

    6. Re:The kaboom by azalin · · Score: 1

      Actually Agent Smith compared us to a virus, rather than a microbe

    7. Re:The kaboom by isorox · · Score: 1

      But where's the Earth shattering kaboom? There's supposed to be an Earth shattering kaboom!

      No boom today, boom tomorrow (well on Friday)

    8. Re:The kaboom by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Did the ESM precede the FSM?

    9. Re:The kaboom by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But where's the Earth shattering kaboom? There's supposed to be an Earth shattering kaboom!

      I'm not angry, just terribly hurt.

    10. Re:The kaboom by lgw · · Score: 1

      You know, I've seen it spelled "illudium" before, but I always assumed it was "Eludium", and element somewhat less rare then "Unobtanium".

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    11. Re:The kaboom by Darinbob · · Score: 2

      If there's no one there to hear it, does the kaboom make a noise?

    12. Re:The kaboom by Dogtanian · · Score: 1

      do you write for dinosaure comics ?

      No, he's the artist.

      --
      "Slashdot - News and Chat Sites Deviant". (Click "homepage" link above for details).
    13. Re:The kaboom by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That will be done by the cause of the Second Great Dying, this time will be something a bit bigger than a microbe, in fact will look a lot like us.

      Humans are so egotistical. There is NOTHING that we are capable of that would get anywhere close to the extinction rates of any of the mass extinctions this earth has faced. Oh, you're just some liberal repeating NPR hypberbole. Sorry, I'll take my facts and go.

    14. Re:The kaboom by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This was an Earth-shattering kabloom.

    15. Re:The kaboom by gmuslera · · Score: 1

      You don't need a big explosion to have something that qualifies as a great dying. We could have already done it, by some definition

    16. Re:The kaboom by bmo · · Score: 1

      Chuck Jones called it Illudium.

      But then again, he also called it Q-36 in his book "Chuck Amuck" instead of Pu-36 which is what wound up on the audio track.

      --
      BMO

    17. Re:The kaboom by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But where's the Earth shattering kaboom? There's supposed to be an Earth shattering kaboom!

      ===
      Now governments will be searching for this wonderful germ that has no anti-biotic or preventative vaccine.

  2. A whole strain? by LambdaWolf · · Score: 0

    His theory is that the extinction was caused by a single strain of bacteria. [emphasis added]

    Aw, that's not as much fun. The headline made me think that this guy somehow had it narrowed down to one actual organism.

    --
    "This algorithm runs in constant time. Come on, 2,147,483,648 is a constant..."
    1. Re:A whole strain? by martin-boundary · · Score: 1

      The headline made me think that this guy somehow had it narrowed down to one actual organism.

      RTFA again: he did, her name's Andromeda...

    2. Re:A whole strain? by marcello_dl · · Score: 4, Funny

      > The headline made me think that this guy somehow had it narrowed down to one actual organism.

      That is difficult to envision, Chuck Norris was born so much later.

      --
      ---- MISSING MISCELLANEOUS DATA SEGMENT --- [sigdash] trolololol
    3. Re:A whole strain? by azalin · · Score: 1

      Just imagine a Neandertal Norris for a second and compare it to the Chuck Norris of our age minus cowboy boots. They'd practically be twins

    4. Re:A whole strain? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yea,
      But I wouldn't fuck with either one of 'em.

    5. Re:A whole strain? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      His theory is that the extinction was caused by a single strain of bacteria. [emphasis added]

      Aw, that's not as much fun. The headline made me think that this guy somehow had it narrowed down to one actual organism.

      It could be read as one really big bacteria giving it the old college try.

    6. Re:A whole strain? by marcello_dl · · Score: 1

      You're right. Chuck Norris doesn't evolve.
      The implications for Darwinists are serious.

      --
      ---- MISSING MISCELLANEOUS DATA SEGMENT --- [sigdash] trolololol
    7. Re:A whole strain? by Hognoxious · · Score: 4, Funny

      Chuck Norris doesn't evolve.

      He doesn't need to - ecosystems adapt to him.

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    8. Re:A whole strain? by marcello_dl · · Score: 1

      >> Chuck Norris doesn't evolve.
      > He doesn't need to - ecosystems adapt to him

      Oh wait... then the problem arised in Soviet Russia!

      --
      ---- MISSING MISCELLANEOUS DATA SEGMENT --- [sigdash] trolololol
    9. Re:A whole strain? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      well played sir!

    10. Re:A whole strain? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh you... fucking Chuck Norris joke maker. I hate you. SO. FUCKING. MUCH. I wish pure hate was enough to explode your eyes and force your guts up through your mouth.

      I wish nothing more than your death and that of your up voters.

    11. Re:A whole strain? by machine321 · · Score: 1

      YOUR MOVE, ATHEISTS!

  3. I Understand Tragedy of the Commons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Honestly, this is interesting but the article title of, "Single microbe may have triggered the 'Great Dying'" above makes me think of, "Single macrobe triggered the second 'Great Dying' ending all mammalian life on planet Earth."

  4. Jay Gould by Kupfernigk · · Score: 5, Insightful

    He remarked in one of his essays that people completely misunderstand evolution, using teleological thinking to believe that we are in some way the "highest form" or "goal" of evolution. But in fact, in terms of biomass and effects on the Earth's ecosystems, we are still living in the Age of Bacteria.

    --
    From scarped cliff or quarried stone she cries "A thousand types are gone, I care for nothing, no not one."
    1. Re:Jay Gould by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's overstating things. There are a lot of bacteria, but they're very small. It's more like the age of the antarctic krill. Or, going up a few levels, the age of the arthropod.

    2. Re:Jay Gould by Kupfernigk · · Score: 4, Insightful

      What part of "in terms of biomass" did you not understand?

      --
      From scarped cliff or quarried stone she cries "A thousand types are gone, I care for nothing, no not one."
    3. Re:Jay Gould by dinfinity · · Score: 0

      effects on the Earth's ecosystems

      Yes, global nuclear war wouldn't change anything.

      Also, I'd say that thinking that the amount of biomass is a good indicator of evolution is probably a very USian thought.

    4. Re:Jay Gould by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That is pretty ignorant in itself. Evolution has no goal, it just is.

      The life influenced by it have goals. And most of that tends to be, "Eat, sex."
      Hell, in some cases, Die is part of that too. Some lifeforms are just so happy to want to kill themselves after completing that. (including humans, but that is usually for another reason)

    5. Re:Jay Gould by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Also, I'd say that thinking that the amount of biomass is a good indicator of evolution is probably a very USian thought.

      Why would you assume that someone is from the United States of Brazil based on that statement? Or did you mean the United States of America? Please pay attention to common world-wide convention and just refer to them as either "Brazil" or "America" respectively, so as to avoid confusion. Also, saying "USian" makes you sound like you're some kind of idiot with an axe to grind. Just FYI.

    6. Re:Jay Gould by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "In." I understood "terms of biomass," but "in" has me completely flummoxed.

    7. Re:Jay Gould by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually breathe/eat etc are only needs.

      Sex is the only real goal, in order to have offspring and continue your species.

      But it so happens for us that the reward paths for sex (dopamine etc) are also triggered by many events too (fun), so as a side-effect human existance is much richer.

    8. Re:Jay Gould by mapkinase · · Score: 1

      >But in fact, in terms of biomass and effects on the Earth's ecosystems, we are still living in the Age of Bacteria.

      No, we live in Hollywood era.

      --
      I do not believe in karma. "Funny"=-6. Do good and forbid evil. Yours, Oft-Offtopic Flamebaiting Troll.
    9. Re:Jay Gould by Migraineman · · Score: 3, Funny

      Once you have successfully accomplished the "sex" objective, the "sleep" objective moves abruptly to the front of the list (as your offspring will deprive you of any opportunities to do so.)

    10. Re:Jay Gould by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Krill in terms of biomass are probably only the most successful animal species.

      Current biomass estimates are:
      Krill: 500 million tonnes
      Bacteria: 350,000-550,000 million tons

      So bacteria account for ~1000 times more than krill. Sure they're very small, but there are a lot of them.

    11. Re:Jay Gould by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think he read it "in factors of biomass", which actually do hand it to the krill.

    12. Re:Jay Gould by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      are you a quantity or a quality fellow? sure, by quantity or weight, we aren't he most prevalent. We are however effectively the 1%, which control and decree the use and consumption of the majority of this planets resources. to the benefit or determent of everything.

      I choose to believe we are currently the highest form on this globe in the evolutionary scale. At this point in time we CAN largely choose to eliminate ourselves from evolutionary pressures, IF we so choose to .(think logical antibiotic control/use, human population management, resource management, gene therapy in qualities we want).

      In the future, who knows, maybe we could have the capability of colonizing another planet. Bacteria have zero chance of this. to Trump the Panspermia though: I don't believe bacteria can survive a meteor impact which could thrust them into the atmosphere and beyond. Hello Molten/Vaporized/Shocked Quartz debris--how is that not a sterilizing effect?

      On a concessionary side....We're currently letting evolution dictate ourselves, as we're still in n every rat for himself mentality, and we're rapidly depleting resources to get ahead of the jones's.

    13. Re:Jay Gould by SourceFrog · · Score: 1

      What makes biomass some ultimate measure of value?

      --
      My other UID is three digits.
    14. Re:Jay Gould by VoidCrow · · Score: 4, Funny

      It's the ultimate measure of biomass.

    15. Re:Jay Gould by omnichad · · Score: 1

      Common worldwide convention has The United States of America as the only current user of "United States" with the exception of maybe Mexico:
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_(disambiguation)

      Sometimes people in The U.S.A. don't like to say American, because they think it's arrogant. I mean, one entire hemisphere is labeled America, between North and South.

    16. Re:Jay Gould by Intropy · · Score: 1

      What is your objection to his statement? You said "in terms of biomass," and he lists the species with the highest total biomass. In what possible way does that indicate he failed to understand? I guess fail to understand you as well.

    17. Re:Jay Gould by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not that it's the ultimate measure of value, it's that it's the counter to the claim that "there are a lot of bacteria, but they're very small".

      So bacteria win by number of organism, total weight of organisms, effect on environment ...

      Basically, by any measure of extent besides things like "ability to quote lyrics from Gangnam Style", bacteria win. We just dismiss them because we can't see them.

  5. methane by swell · · Score: 0

    Yeah, we produce a lot of methane here too.
    I can see how it might kill off some species.
    Put a cork in it, people!

    --
    ...omphaloskepsis often...
    1. Re:methane by foniksonik · · Score: 1

      Despite the foul odor the folks around here mostly just expel hot air.

      --
      A fool throws a stone into a well and a thousand sages can not remove it.
  6. And it could also have been... by dohzer · · Score: 2, Funny

    By reading the Wikipedia article, I have determined that it also may have been:
    - A single rock
    - A single volcano
    - The build-up of a single type of gas
    - The rising of a single body of water
    - Lack of a single element in the water

    1. Re:And it could also have been... by DarwinSurvivor · · Score: 1

      Lack of a single element in the not-water

      FTFY

    2. Re:And it could also have been... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you would have read the article he read, you would realize you're fixing it wrong:

      Evidence for widespread ocean anoxia (severely deficient in oxygen) and euxinia (presence of hydrogen sulfide) is found from the Late Permian to the Early Triassic.

  7. MAY HAVE BEEN ... WAIT FOR IT ... MARTIANS !! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Because as we already know, Mars Needs Women !!

  8. Not the volcanos but the volcanos by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Previously, most researchers believed that the Permian mass extinction was a result of a series of volcanic eruptions in what is now Siberia.

    ...

    However, mathanosarcina requires nickel in order to produce methane quickly. Nickel levels spiked almost 251 million years ago, likely because of a spike in Siberian lava from the volcanoes themselves.

    In other words, even if the microbes did what they did, that was likely still part of a chain of events triggered by the same volcanos erupting.

  9. The Zombie Apocolypse did it! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Yes. A ridiculous theory. But about as plausible, after all it's just another virus...

    Zombie dinosaurs chomped their way through the whole planet, then finally decomposed themselves over time. Only small mammals who could hide underground or birds that could fly away escaped those brain-lovin' undead dinos!

    Ask the sharks; they saw the whole thing.

    1. Re:The Zombie Apocolypse did it! by undead+ichi · · Score: 0

      Yes. A ridiculous theory. But about as plausible, after all it's just another virus...

      Zombie dinosaurs chomped their way through the whole planet, then finally decomposed themselves over time. Only small mammals who could hide underground or birds that could fly away escaped those brain-lovin' undead dinos!

      Ask the sharks; they saw the whole thing.

      that would be so awesome i need that film in my life lol

    2. Re:The Zombie Apocolypse did it! by Hatta · · Score: 1

      I asked a shark, but he just told me to suck his dick.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    3. Re:The Zombie Apocolypse did it! by dwye · · Score: 1

      Zombie dinosaurs chomped their way through the whole planet, then finally decomposed themselves over time.

      Um, this refers to the Permian Extinction. Therefore, it was caused by zombie frogs. Not nearly as awesome.

  10. WARNING: theory requires homeopathic leanings by Rogerborg · · Score: 1

    Volcanic eruptions in Siberia = entire planet dusted with nickel.

    Eh, geologist comes up with geological theory. Funding running a bit low?

    --
    If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
    1. Re:WARNING: theory requires homeopathic leanings by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      the quantity of nickel required is "very small". It's a catalyst, not a consumable. When in ash, teh jet stream and ocean currenst are very good at distributing it. Completely plausible as a theory goes. Now, do we have proof? Not yet, however, this is better than many of the "look for money" theories.

  11. Rings a bell by valentyn · · Score: 0

    Mass extinction in a few thousand years and a single species responsible - I see a parallel. It isn't mass extinction exactly, but mankind has caused quite some disturbance in both land and sea ecosystems already. A few thousand years should be plenty enough to cause real mass extinction.

    --
    my other sig is a 500 page novel
    1. Re:Rings a bell by dinfinity · · Score: 1

      Why would we wait that long?
      Most of the critters are pretty useless to us already or will be so in the near future.

    2. Re:Rings a bell by lgw · · Score: 1

      Mass extinctions are fairly common throughout history - and we're chump change on the scale of such things.

      For example, the Strait of Gibraltar is closing right now (on a geological scale - mere thousands of years), which will isolate the Med. This will cause the Med to evaporate in just a few centuries, leaving the most Hellish wastland imaginable temperatures in the basin will exeed the boiling point of water. That will in turn play merry Hell with all of Europe's climate, and likely worldwide climate.

      Shit like that happens all the time (on a geological scale). We're small potatos, our hubris aside.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
  12. Single microbe or single strain? by Mister+Liberty · · Score: 1

    Which was it?
    A comet!

    1. Re:Single microbe or single strain? by turkeyfeathers · · Score: 1

      The most dangerous single microbe in the history of the world: Bacillus jeanclaudevandammiensis

    2. Re:Single microbe or single strain? by operagost · · Score: 2

      Meh. Chuck Norris makes his yogurt out of Bacillus jeanclaudevandammiensis.

      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
  13. Seems a bit of a stretch; TFA's short, see below.. by Bearhouse · · Score: 1

    Rothman analyzed a sample of sediment from the end of the Permian era that he obtained in China. From his analysis, he found that the rise in carbon levels was way too sharp to be caused by a geologic event like volcanic eruptions. He argues that instead, a microbe was behind this sudden rise.
    Called methanosarcina, this sea-dwelling microbe is responsible for most of the methane produced biologically even today. Rothman and his team discovered that methanosarcina developed the ability to produce methane 231 million years ago. While that ability came around too late to be single-handedly responsible for the link.

    Eh?

    However, mathanosarcina requires nickel in order to produce methane quickly. Nickel levels spiked almost 251 million years ago, likely because of a spike in Siberian lava from the volcanoes themselves. This indicates that methanosarcina was directly responsible for producing the methane that killed off an overwhelming majority of the Earth's species.

    Don't see where he proves the methane did it...

  14. It's not the size of the organism by maweki · · Score: 5, Funny

    it's how you mass-extinct with it.

  15. Re:It's very poor science in one way... by TapeCutter · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Yes, evidence that backs up your idea is a good way to get a science grant, science grants have a proven track record of increasing our knowledge of the world around us.

    Nowadays you HAVE to incorporate gas-influenced Climate Change into EVERYTHING you produce.Otherwise you risk losing your grant to a malleable researcher.

    Yeah right because the 100+ nations that fund the IPCC all have exactly the same political agenda and every mainstream scientist, science journal and scientific institute on the planet has been bought of by an international system of grants that doesn't actually exist. Do you realize how fucking crazy paranoid you have to be to believe that, it's the same anti-science shit you hear from creationists, anti-vax'ers, and other groups of whacko's who don't like specific aspects of the natural world and choose to walk around with their head up their arse. Geology is the only tool we have to investigate past climate, get a grip on your paranoid delusions and go read a climate science text book, particularly the chapters on paleo-climatology.

    --
    And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
  16. H.G. Wells by thoughtfulbloke · · Score: 0

    "And scattered about it, some in their overturned war-machines, some in the now rigid handling-machines, and a dozen of them stark and silent and laid in a row, were the Martiansâ"dead!â"slain by the putrefactive and disease bacteria against which their systems were unprepared; slain as the red weed was being slain; slain, after all man's devices had failed, by the humblest things that God, in his wisdom, has put upon this earth." Admittedly, Wells had a better fleshed out mechanism for his bacteria.

    1. Re:H.G. Wells by blagooly · · Score: 0

      Did anyone else laugh out loud when reading this story? Is this a joke, a hoax? Well's tale is of a limited number of things quickly killed off by an alien element. This theorized killer bug argument requires evolution and adaptation suspended for multiple generations. 10 million years in fact. This is perhaps the most profoundly stupid theory I have ever heard. It merits a special trophy in the creator's names. A subset of the darwin awards.

    2. Re:H.G. Wells by mfnickster · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I'll see your Wells and raise you a Watts:

      "Let me tell you what happens if this thing gets out," she said quietly. "First off, nothing. We outnumber it, you see. At first we swamp it through sheer numbers, the models predict all sorts of skirmishes and false starts. But eventually it gets a foothold. Then it outcompetes conventional decomposers and monopolizes our inorganic nutrient base. That cuts the whole trophic pyramid off at the ankles. You, and me, and the viruses and the giant sequoias all just fade away for want of nitrates or some stupid thing. And welcome to the Age of Behemoth."

      --
      "Slow down, Cowboy! It has been 3 years, 7 months and 26 days since you last successfully posted a comment."
    3. Re:H.G. Wells by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      This is perhaps the most profoundly stupid theory I have ever heard. It merits a special trophy in the creator's names. A subset of the darwin awards.

      It wasn't a theory, it was fiction. The idea that earth microbes could infect a space alien with different evolution and possibly different chemistry is ludicrous, but far less so than the ideas that Klingons could mate with Earth people, or denizens in a galaxy far, far away would look anything like us. Or the idea that machines could think like Asimov's robots.

      Have you read Stranger in a Strange Land? There's very little science fiction that doesn't require a huge effort at ignoring impossibilities and unliklihoods.

    4. Re:H.G. Wells by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, no. It's reasonable to assume Wells' Martians like any other carbon-based lifeform have a metabolism that breaks digested food into simple molecules like glucose and amino acids which make it easier for their cells to utilize. This incidentally makes these simple nutrients easily available to opportunistic micro-organisms as well. It's unlikely that the alien species would operate using completely different rules of chemistry since they do exist in the same universe as us - universe awash with materials to create life similar to ours.

      Even if they did, it's entirely possible that some substance in the aliens' body would be either be nutritious to a terrestrial organism (anything in a refined, reactive form will be edible to something) or in the absence of an immune reaction it would become a growth environment where microbes could spread without much competition from other Earth microbes, and if it breathes Earth's air it would eventually have mold growing inside its lungs if its immune system is not prepared for it.

  17. Re:Second post. by Bearhouse · · Score: 2, Funny

    *sigh*

    Quite complaining & get nerding.

    As repeated many, many times here, install Adblock, Noscript...

    And/or load up your Hosts file...

    Or contribute enough, get good karma, and /. lets you turn the ads off

  18. Re:Second post. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    *sigh*

    Quite complaining & get nerding.

    As repeated many, many times here, install Adblock, Noscript...

    And/or load up your Hosts file...

    Or contribute enough, get good karma, and /. lets you turn the ads off

    I've got adblock installed; this one was on TFA site and missed by easylist.

  19. Re:It's very poor science in one way... by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1

    Yes, evidence that backs up your idea is a good way to get a science grant, science grants have a proven track record of increasing our knowledge of the world around us.

    Nowadays you HAVE to incorporate gas-influenced Climate Change into EVERYTHING you produce.Otherwise you risk losing your grant to a malleable researcher.

    Yeah right because the 100+ nations that fund the IPCC all have exactly the same political agenda and every mainstream scientist, science journal and scientific institute on the planet has been bought of by an international system of grants that doesn't actually exist. Do you realize how fucking crazy paranoid you have to be to believe that, it's the same anti-science shit you hear from creationists, anti-vax'ers, and other groups of whacko's who don't like specific aspects of the natural world and choose to walk around with their head up their arse. Geology is the only tool we have to investigate past climate, get a grip on your paranoid delusions and go read a climate science text book, particularly the chapters on paleo-climatology.

    Kinda like creationists claiming that you can't trust biologists because they're all in on an atheistic conspiracy to discredit religion.

    The foundation of science denialism is disqualifying the actual experts from having an opinion on the topic.

    --
    Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
  20. Re:Jay Gould (again) by Kupfernigk · · Score: 4, Informative
    Our ability to create a global extinction event just puts us on the same level as an asteroid, this proposed strain of bacteria, or a chain of volcanoes, from a biological point of view.

    And thinking about the importance of a phylum in terms of its biomass is nothing to do with whether a biologist is American or not - it tells you the significance of that phylum in food chains. What does the AC above think the krill eat? They eat plankton. Now tell me, which is there more of? Krill or plankton? And what do plankton do? They use sunlight and nutrients (largely recycled by bacteria from decaying matter), or they use bacteria directly.

    How does organic matter in the soil get broken down into a form that plants can use? Fungi and bacteria. Without plants, there would be only a few people living on the sea coasts.

    Read Jay Gould. Then read some of the many books he recommends. You will then be able to make more intelligent posts on these subjects.

    --
    From scarped cliff or quarried stone she cries "A thousand types are gone, I care for nothing, no not one."
  21. Re:It's very poor science in one way... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I see you havent make the connection yet. When tilting at windmills, do you yell at the wind or do something to stop the wind. like close a door. The person you quoted is correct. To obtain funding you have to accept one of two theories. Either pro or against. Which is correct. According to you whatever the boss says, boss being the monied ones who give grants to prove the theory in one fashion. What if they are wrong. Which I believe the IPCC is right now, on global warming. I say it's the sun, stupid but right. The sun is a variable star. Check the output with your solar cells, and tell me it isn't, mathamatically, you need a constant figure to do the equations, but that number is not a constant, it varies, on a 8 minute cycle, thats plus or minus depending on the distance to the sun, which varies to the orbit, and so on. But your beer fart isn't the thing doing in the world.

  22. Re:It's very poor science in one way... by Kupfernigk · · Score: 1
    I think you meant "Geology is not the only tool...", we also have ice cores, dendrochronology, carbon dating, isotopic ratios, and other things I personally don't know about and cannot be bothered.

    And the climate change denialists have...Christopher Walter Monckton.

    --
    From scarped cliff or quarried stone she cries "A thousand types are gone, I care for nothing, no not one."
  23. Coincidence? by tttonyyy · · Score: 0

    The Mayan calendar ends on December 21st, and drilling is due to resume into the Ellsworth sub-Antartic lake on the 21st?

    http://www.ellsworth.org.uk/

    I for one welcome our tiny little waterborn underlords.

    --
    biopowered.co.uk - catalytically cracking triglycerides for home automotive use since 2008. Just say no to big oil!
    1. Re:Coincidence? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      NB: above link has nothing to do with Jeri Ellsworth. Sad face :(

    2. Re:Coincidence? by isorox · · Score: 1

      Coincidence

      Yes

  24. Thanks for the oil! by gtirloni · · Score: 0

    Much appreciated.

    --
    none
  25. He is mistaken by paiute · · Score: 3, Insightful

    He does not have a theory. He has a hypothesis.

    --
    If Slashdot were chemistry it would look like this:Cadaverine
  26. Re:Second post. by q.kontinuum · · Score: 0, Offtopic
    Current score: (Score:2, Informative)

    Come on, how is this informative?!? Either Troll or Funny, I don't care, but this smells of a moderator trolling or trying to be funny!

    --
    Trolling is a art!
  27. Cofactor F430 by epine · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Cofactor F430

    Forget the organism. This is about the advent of a novel reaction pathway, that scales on the availability of nickel. Surprisingly, geology might have something to say on that score. Any vigorous reaction pathway that bubbles madly away at an oceanic scale is almost certain to colour the infrared signature of our thin gas membrane. Imagine if everyone on the planet had an F430.

    There's a lot to like about this hypothesis. I've seen worse. To determine exactly how this pathway becomes prolific at global scale would take decades of further study. It's as yet a humble beginning, of the kind that sometimes pans out.

    1. Re:Cofactor F430 by need4mospd · · Score: 1

      Imagine if everyone on the planet had an F430.

      There would be no more speed bumps and Italy would have the highest GDP? Right?

    2. Re:Cofactor F430 by mapkinase · · Score: 1

      That's a theory that costs a nickel

      --
      I do not believe in karma. "Funny"=-6. Do good and forbid evil. Yours, Oft-Offtopic Flamebaiting Troll.
    3. Re:Cofactor F430 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      That's exactly right... a very important point that the press release failed to mention is that collaborators in the study, Greg Fournier and Eric Alm, initially identified Methanosarcina as the probable organism responsible, since it contains the unique pathway for making methane that evolved recently by horizontal gene transfer, which is a highly unusual event. Fournier discovered the gene transfer evolving the pathway in 2008 (http://jb.asm.org/content/190/3/1124.full), and at that time predicted it would have had major biogeochemical consequences for the planetary biosphere. Later, as part of this work he showed that, contrary to the misquote in the article, the best estimate for the divergence of the recipients of the new pathway is precisely 251 million years ago, not 231 as reported. They presented their work this summer at the American Society for Microbiology General Meeting. So the organism and specific metabolic process involved, and the timing of its evolution, is far more than just conjecture to match the exciting geochemical data.

    4. Re:Cofactor F430 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Imagine if everyone on the planet had an F450!

    5. Re:Cofactor F430 by BioBrian · · Score: 1

      It certainly is more compelling if you start there and then view the geochemical as supporting evidence.

  28. A New Low for Science "Journalism" by fearofcarpet · · Score: 1

    Setting aside the lack of detail and the characterization of an untested hypothesis as a theory, if you follow the link in TFA about the dissenting opinions you'll find this gem:

    Methane explosion

    But just what caused that massive methane release remained a mystery. Daniel Rothman, a researcher at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and his colleagues wondered whether ocean-dwelling bacteria that churn out methane were the culprits.

    His team found through genetic analysis that bacteria called methanosarcina evolved the ability to break down nickel and make methane as part of its metabolism about 251 million years ago. The bacteria may have exploded in population, thereby releasing the ocean's vast methane reserves. And because the bacteria add an oxygen molecule to methane during metabolism, an exponential rise in methanosarcina may have catastrophically depleted ocean oxygen levels.

    So now bacteria are performing alchemy (converting Ni to CH4) and "adding an oxygen to methane" no longer produces methanol (CH3OH) or formaldehyde (CH2O), rather it is apparently just "methane with an added oxygen" which is apparently still a potent greenhouse gas.

    --
    Actually, I wrote my thesis on life experience.
    1. Re:A New Low for Science "Journalism" by mrsquid0 · · Score: 1

      It is fairly clear that this is not alchemy. The nickel is acting as a catalyst.

      --
      Just because you are paranoid does not mean that no-one is out to get you.
    2. Re:A New Low for Science "Journalism" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's not what TFA said. The TFA said "evolved the ability to BREAK DOWN NICKEL."

      Into what? What does a bacteria break nickel down into?

    3. Re:A New Low for Science "Journalism" by fearofcarpet · · Score: 1

      Read what they wrote: "methanosarcina evolved the ability to break down nickel and make methane." You can't break nickel down without doing nuclear chemistry--you can only change its oxidation state. It's clear to anyone with even a basic grasp of chemistry that methanogens use nickel enzyme complexes as catalysts, but the author of this ridiculous failure of journalism clearly thought that methanosarcina produce methane from nickel.

      --
      Actually, I wrote my thesis on life experience.
  29. Re:Second post. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    AdBlock + NoScript

    Never an auto-play advertisement be seen.

  30. Re:Second post. by donscarletti · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Video ads = evil

    Unintrusive, relavent and optimised ads = a good way to generate revenue and maybe even learn about a useful product from time to time.

    --
    When Argumentum ad Hominem falls short, try Argumentum ad Matrem
  31. Civil War of the Worlds by tverbeek · · Score: 1

    Sounds a bit like H.G. Wells' War of the Worlds, but involving just one planet.

    --
    http://alternatives.rzero.com/
  32. Re:It's very poor science in one way... by mrsquid0 · · Score: 1

    > Nowadays you HAVE to incorporate gas-influenced Climate Change into EVERYTHING you produce.Otherwise you risk losing your grant to a malleable researcher.

    The vast majority of scientific funding in the US and Canada goes to people who are not working on climate change, or anything related to climate change.

    --
    Just because you are paranoid does not mean that no-one is out to get you.
  33. Re:He is mistaken by fearofcarpet · · Score: 2

    And methanosarcina are archaea, not bacteria, a fact that was three clicks away from the Wikipedia entry on methanosarcina, which is apparently too many clicks for Slashdot or Medical Daily (but New Scientist got it right). I suspect that what was actually presented at the meeting was a cogent hypothesis for how methanogens contributed to the Great Dying following an increase in bio-available nickel. What we get is the result after several application of the stupid filter that is the Internet.

    --
    Actually, I wrote my thesis on life experience.
  34. No more medicaldaily.com articles, please by Muad'Dave · · Score: 3, Interesting

    PLEASE - let's not have any more articles from medicaldaily.com until they stop firing off 2 OR MORE auto-playing videos at the same time on every article.

    --
    Tiller's Rule: Never use a word in written form that you've only heard and never read. You will end up looking foolish.
    1. Re:No more medicaldaily.com articles, please by LurkerXXX · · Score: 1

      Your script blocking browser ad-on is broken. No ads here at all.

    2. Re:No more medicaldaily.com articles, please by Gothmolly · · Score: 1

      What's an ad?

      --
      I want to delete my account but Slashdot doesn't allow it.
    3. Re:No more medicaldaily.com articles, please by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just blacklist medicaldaily.com. Everybody who has visited that site once does.

    4. Re:No more medicaldaily.com articles, please by Muad'Dave · · Score: 1

      These slipped past ad block pro. Usually I don't see them either.

      --
      Tiller's Rule: Never use a word in written form that you've only heard and never read. You will end up looking foolish.
    5. Re:No more medicaldaily.com articles, please by TubeSteak · · Score: 1

      I had to explicitly tell NoScript that 33universal.com is untrusted.
      That made the stupid auto-play video stop triggering.

      auto-playing flash videos are the new ::blink:: tag

      --
      [Fuck Beta]
      o0t!
    6. Re:No more medicaldaily.com articles, please by Muad'Dave · · Score: 1

      These slipped past ad block pro. Usually I don't see them either. I'll have to look around.

      --
      Tiller's Rule: Never use a word in written form that you've only heard and never read. You will end up looking foolish.
  35. Re:It's very poor science in one way... by yndrd1984 · · Score: 1

    ice cores, dendrochronology, carbon dating, isotopic ratios, and other things

    Yep, lots of different kinds of evidence. And all of those tests are done from things that happen to be dug out of the earth...

    I guess you could find evidence of previous climates from the genetics or geographical distribution of extant populations, but I can't think of any widely used evidence of previous climates that doesn't have 'geo-' somewhere in the title of its field.

  36. Re:He is mistaken by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And methanosarcina are archaea, not bacteria, a fact that was three clicks away from the Wikipedia entry on methanosarcina, which is apparently too many clicks for Slashdot or Medical Daily (but New Scientist got it right). I suspect that what was actually presented at the meeting was a cogent hypothesis for how methanogens contributed to the Great Dying following an increase in bio-available nickel. What we get is the result after several application of the stupid filter that is the Internet.

    I agree.

    Methane deposits are/were more than plentiful under the Arctic ocean, surely it's less of a stretch to imagine destabilisation of undersea methane deposits.

    If methanogens evolved to use nickel to produce methane, then wouldn't that indicate that perhaps the time-frame involved would allow for species to adapt in a way that wouldn't reflect the utter destruction in the great dying?

    cfm

  37. Dinosaur Herpes by Greyfox · · Score: 1
    Hey baby! Nice scales! Why don't you and I go back to my place and EEW WHAT'S THAT ON YOUR FACE?!

    20 years later, no more dinosaurs.

    --

    I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?

  38. Obviously by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The bacteria was picked up off of an unsanitary telephone.

  39. This has happened twice ... could it happen again? by Chrisq · · Score: 4, Interesting

    If this is correct it is the second time an organism has wiped out most existing life forms The Great Oxygenation Event is thought to have killed most existing forms of life - then single-celled organisms. It makes you wonder, could it happen again - a bacteria completely changing Earth's chemistry in a way that's incompatible with most existing life forms?

  40. Re:Jay Gould (again) by dinfinity · · Score: 2

    No. No, it doesn't. We have the ability to create a global extinction event at any time. It is absolutely ridiculous to imply that bacteria have more potential drastic effects on the ecosystems on Earth than humans. That we choose not to wield the vast array of means we have to do so, does not equate to the idea that those means do not exist.

    Continuing, I was and am very well aware that total biomass can indicate the significance of a species to the ecosystem as a whole (but made an apparently failed attempt at humour). To imply that biomass is particularly important in determining what success in evolution is, is wrong, however.

    You intentionally introduced the word phylum, thereby lobbing quite a number of species on the same pile. If one looks at biomass of distinct species, krill and humans are numbers one and two. More importantly, the specializations of different bacteria species means that any individual species is by far not as versatile, resilient, stable, long-living and powerful as humans are. If you disagree, I'd like to hear which specific species we are dwarfed by.

  41. Re:He is mistaken by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Tenure generally requires making a novel contribution to your field of study, so don't be surprised that young scientists are always making fantastical claims about the way the world might be. This isn't a bad thing - it's how the process works. Good ideas don't come to forefront all by themselves - they all have such humble beginnings. Some claims pan out, some don't. But this is interesting, possible (in terms of chemistry, not necessarily history), and deserves further scrutiny. Perhaps the hypothesis will be shot down. But we shouldn't discourage people from making the effort required to do good science.

  42. Re:Jay Gould (again) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Jay Gould is not a supporter of traditional evolution theory. He supports the punctuated equilibrium based upon evidence in the fossil record. The basic idea is that animals do not gradually adapt to an environement. Instead, some mutant freak for some reason becomes dominant in an area. This is often because of a radical change in that environment. Richard Dawkins highly opposes these views: despite the significant evidence Gould produced, it cannot prove that traditional evolution did not occur for the same reason that no one can prove there is no God.

  43. Re:He is mistaken by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hm, just looked the guy up, and he's not the eager young whippersnapper I assumed he was. Still, this is how you do science. Good on him.

  44. And I know where it came from! by macraig · · Score: 1

    Single Microbe May Have Triggered the "Great Dying"

    It's the strain from Andromeda. Michael had it all figgered out.

  45. This might be right.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    But then again, we have no idea..

    Options are:
    1) METEOR!!! - hit the earth, causing huge cataclysmic weather effects.
    2) ICE AGE!!! - cooled everything down to horribly low temperatures in a flash (few hundred or thousands ofyears).
    3) GENETIC MUTATION IN BACTERIA!!! - rare killer viruses killed everything accidentally.
    4) GENETIC MUTATION IN VEGETATION!!! - plants discovered a new way to be less nutritious and fend off the herding-hordes

    Any hypothesis will have to come up with reasons why small dinosaurs, small mammals, and lizards, lots and lots of lizards survived, and not the bigger dinosaurs, that's why I think ice age or mutation in vegetation are the likeliest options.

    1. Re:This might be right.. by niado · · Score: 2

      But then again, we have no idea..

      Options are: 1) METEOR!!! - hit the earth, causing huge cataclysmic weather effects. 2) ICE AGE!!! - cooled everything down to horribly low temperatures in a flash (few hundred or thousands ofyears). 3) GENETIC MUTATION IN BACTERIA!!! - rare killer viruses killed everything accidentally. 4) GENETIC MUTATION IN VEGETATION!!! - plants discovered a new way to be less nutritious and fend off the herding-hordes

      Any hypothesis will have to come up with reasons why small dinosaurs, small mammals, and lizards, lots and lots of lizards survived, and not the bigger dinosaurs, that's why I think ice age or mutation in vegetation are the likeliest options.

      You seem to be confusing The Great Dying (the extinction event at the P-Tr boundary which killed 83% of all genera on the planet) and the K-T extinction event, which killed the dinosaurs and various other creatures and plants.

      The consensus on the latter is that the extinction was caused primarily by the impact that created the Chicxulub crater, possibly with additional impacts and increased volcanic activity playing a further role.

  46. Re:Seems a bit of a stretch; TFA's short, see belo by Muad'Dave · · Score: 1

    Perhaps the nickel was present and widely distributed pre-methanosarcina explosion, and they 'ate' it all, so there's little left now.

    --
    Tiller's Rule: Never use a word in written form that you've only heard and never read. You will end up looking foolish.
  47. Re:He is mistaken by OldTOP · · Score: 1

    Good point – but in fact a dictionary does show about half a dozen meanings for "theory", one of which is a synonym for hypothesis.

    It's a real problem that many people seem to think that "theory" has only that one meaning, and don't understand that in science it more often means an established body of knowledge generally derived from a number of well-verified hypotheses.

    --
    The universe was intelligently designed. Unfortunately God was in a hurry so he coded it in Java.
  48. Re:Jay Gould (again) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And thinking about the importance of a phylum in terms of its biomass is nothing to do with whether a biologist is American or not

    Thou failest it, brother.

  49. Site is broken by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So, when I come to Slashdot in Chrome it automatically puts me in the mobile version of the website. This use to not be a big deal because there was a switch at the bottom that would allow me to go to fullscreen. Now I can't find that switch. Honestly, it is pissing me off.

    Captcha: despise

  50. Re:It's very poor science in one way... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I see you havent make the connection yet. When tilting at windmills, do you yell at the wind or do something to stop the wind. like close a door.

    Huh? What?

  51. Re:He is mistaken by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wow, splitting hairs over synonyms that are used interchangeably in every day speech! Keep it up and one day you'll be a scientist at MIT too!

  52. Archaea, not bacteria! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Since when have archaea been bacteria? Why do slashdot writers always seem to use what they think are synonyms "to make the thing more interesting to read" yet not realize that the words don't mean what they think they do.. Microbe =/= bacteria

    1. Re:Archaea, not bacteria! by jc42 · · Score: 1

      Since when have archaea been bacteria?

      Well, for several centuries, in the understanding of the general public. The verification that they're very different sorts of critters dates back only a few decades. The proposed splitting of bacteria and archaea orginated in the 1970s, and it became fully accepted by biologists during the 1990s.

      Thus, the media and the general population have had only 20 to 30 years to adapt to this new classification, and that's not nearly enough time. They also keep talking about the extinction of the dinosaurs, several decades after zoologists officially reclassified the birds as a branch of the dinosaurs based on rather extensive evidence.

      About all we can do about this is educate people. Mocking them for confusing archaea and bacteria won't have much effect; they'll just dismiss you as a jerk and ignore you. So try to explain the mistake, rather than ridiculing it, and you may have more success.

      (Our little pet dinosaur, a blue-crowned conure, just flew onto my shoulder. She says "Squawk!" Actually, it sounds like she's saying "Iraq!", trying to get into a political discussion. She doesn't understand that we're talking about archaea, either. But she and her relatives may understand the issue before a lot of the human population does. ;-)

      --
      Those who do study history are doomed to stand helplessly by while everyone else repeats it.
  53. This is how you're disappointed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    this is how you're disappointed
    this is how you're disappointed
    this is how you're disappointed
    Not with a...oh, you know the rest.

  54. It's the smell! by Qbertino · · Score: 2

    Actually Agent Smith compared us to a virus, rather than a microbe

    It's the smell!

    --
    We suffer more in our imagination than in reality. - Seneca
  55. Re:It's very poor science in one way... by dywolf · · Score: 2

    in science all theories are supposed to have a null value for validity until proven valid/invalid.
    in pure science if a scientist presents a conflicting point of view or theory, based on whatever evidence, it should be investigated to determine its validity.

    the guy was refering to the fact that anyone who thinks they have a counter argument to climate change has much trouble getting funding and get shutdown, without any determination of validity, because climate change has very much become a politicized topic, and it is a dogma of sorts in the world outside actual climate research.

    the scientists are all too willing to "do science" and perform research, even into counter arguments, because it all advances knowledge on the subject.
    its the funders, the politicians, the people obliquely involved, the general public, and by your reposnse you yourself too, that have fallen into the dogma trap, and cut things off that dont agree with their already preconceived notions.

    --
    The guy who said the election was rigged won the presidency with the second-most votes.
  56. Re:It's very poor science in one way... by dywolf · · Score: 1

    addendum: and if you dont think there's politics (not red/blue, but ass kissing, researching whats "hip/popular", etc) involved in getting funding for research, you're horribly deluded.

    --
    The guy who said the election was rigged won the presidency with the second-most votes.
  57. Re:Jay Gould (again) by dinfinity · · Score: 1

    Yeah, confined to the ocean and only in temperate surface waters. We can take 'em ;-)

  58. Re:Second post. by Redmancometh · · Score: 1

    Roll-over video ads in multiple locations are hyperevil. Not on slashdot, but elsewhere. Its like browsing an anger minefield.

  59. Yep. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    People use words incorrectly, and then their incorrect usage gets documented in the dictionary as a correct usage, and the word becomes less useful by virtue of ambiguity.

    Many words in English can serve as their own antonyms because of this. Like "belie" which can mean "to lie" or "to reveal as a lie." Or "Cleave" which can mean "to separate" or "to adhere". Or "poignant" which can mean "emotionally painful" or "delightful."

    "Irony" was useful when it exclusively meant "outcome is exact opposite of what was expected/intended." But now, because so many people misunderstood the word, all our dictionaries include "any odd or coincidental circumstance" as a valid meaning.

    We do not do ourselves any favors by allowing the stupidest among us to define our words for us. All it does is make our language less useful, requiring us to use even more words when we want to say anything at all.

  60. Re:It's very poor science in one way... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > Nowadays you HAVE to incorporate gas-influenced Climate Change into EVERYTHING you produce.Otherwise you risk losing your grant to a malleable researcher.

    Sounds like you ARE that malleable researcher.

    We have met the enemy, and he is us.

    captcha: confess

  61. This is only half the story! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The press release failed to mention that collaborators in the study, Greg Fournier and Eric Alm, initially identified Methanosarcina as the probable organism responsible, since ONLY it has the particular pathway for making methane that evolved recently by horizontal gene transfer, which is a highly unusual genetic event. Fournier discovered the gene transfer evolving the pathway in 2008 (http://jb.asm.org/content/190/3/1124.full), and at that time predicted it would have had major biogeochemical consequences for the planetary biosphere. Later, as part of this work he showed that, contrary to the misquote in the article, the best estimate for the evolution of Methanosarcina containing the new pathway is 251 million years ago (the exact time of the extinction), not 231 as reported. This is why the authors think that nickel would therefore be important, since it is critical for the growth of all methanogens, including this particular subset, which would have a massive advantage once that global limiting factor was removed. They presented their work this summer at the American Society for Microbiology General Meeting. So there is a lot of evidence that this specific organism and metabolic process is responsible, and that the timing of its evolution is far more than just conjecture to match the exciting geochemical data.

  62. Where's the kaboom? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It coulda been worse.

  63. vast amounts of methane in ocean shelf by peter303 · · Score: 1

    Its locked in water-ice deposits called methane hydrates. Its mainly an annoyance to oil companies because these appear as fake oil deposits in seismic records. Hydrates also lock up high pressure gas which is dangerous to drilling if you do not properly anticipate them. Otherwise these natural gas deposits are far more expensive to produce than land shale-gas. So they are not on the economic radar yet and may be the fossil fuel of the 22nd century.

    These are also mentioned a potential problem for climate change. As the world warms these could melt and release methane into the atmosphere. Methane is twenty times stronger greenhouse gas than carbon dioxide per weight of gas. So some scientist suggest a runaway disaster of more heat releasing more methane causing more heat, etc. This has postulated the cause of a previous mass extinction in the geologic record.

    1. Re:vast amounts of methane in ocean shelf by triffid_98 · · Score: 1

      So some scientist suggest a runaway disaster of more heat releasing more methane causing more heat, etc. This has postulated the cause of a previous mass extinction in the geologic record.

      ...and this very thing is happening in the Siberian permafrost as we speak. It's really a huge swamp and it's started defrosting.

  64. Stop Posting Medical Daily Story Links by recurve7 · · Score: 1

    Ugh. The double auto-play videos at that site should disqualify it for propagation in any Slashdot stories.

  65. Re:It's very poor science in one way... by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

    When tilting at windmills, do you yell at the wind or do something to stop the wind. like close a door.

    Doesn't really help. You see round these here parts we generally build our windmills outside.

    --
    Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
  66. recent atmospheric methane not quite straight up by peter303 · · Score: 1

    Here is the Mona Loa methane graph. Scientists dont understand why yet. First, sunlight destroys it in around 20 years. CO2 takes much longer to come out of the atmosphere. Second, geochemists may not understand all the methane sinks yet, e.g. the ocean.

  67. Re:Jay Gould (again) by mcgrew · · Score: 1

    I see no reason why both theories couldn't be correct, just under different circumstances. The traditional theory where some mutations are benign or helpful, spurring reproduction, and the far more numerous mutations which will kill the organism or make it hard for it to reproduce.

    Then an asteroid hits or the earth rapidly warms/cools or some other catastrophe, most species die but a few species that may well have been on the brink of extinction finds its new environment friendly and thrives, while mutations that might have been benign in the old ecology are now a hindrance, and some traits that were hindrances before (e.g., the organism's size or lack of same) are now helpful to it.

    It seems that both would fit at different times, and there may well be other types of evolution that are similarly possible that no one has yet hypothesizd about.

  68. Re:He is mistaken by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Did this make news because the kid goes to MIT? The stoners at Mankato State can write way better hypotheses.

  69. Hal Clement had it first by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In The Nitrogen Fix a bacteria that fixed nitrogen using gold has removed almost all the oxygen from our atmosphere.

  70. Re:This has happened twice ... could it happen aga by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Of course it could happen. You said it yourself it has happened before. What kind of silly question is that?

  71. This and more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Evidence of one sort doesn't dispel all other evidences. All of these things happened each with a contributing part.

  72. Re:This has happened twice ... could it happen aga by jouassou · · Score: 1

    It makes you wonder, could it happen again - a bacteria completely changing Earth's chemistry in a way that's incompatible with most existing life forms?

    Maybe it's not a strain of bacteria. Maybe it's us.

    Anyway, whatever happens, I'm quite sure the Tardigrades will survive it.

  73. Re:He is mistaken by paiute · · Score: 1

    Wow, splitting hairs over synonyms that are used interchangeably in every day speech! Keep it up and one day you'll be a scientist at MIT too!

    I was. And we knew the difference.

    --
    If Slashdot were chemistry it would look like this:Cadaverine
  74. Re:Jay Gould (again) by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1
    Not only can the nonexistence of God be proven, it has been done many times. Definitions of God fall into a number of categories
    1. Trivial definitions like "I am god" or "that rock is god". These are not what most English speakers mean by god, so this is discarded as gibberish.
    2. Pantheism. Since by this definition everything is god, god has no distinguishing characteristics. There's nothing special about this god. More to the point, once again it's not what most people mean by god.
    3. Self-contradictory definitions.
    4. Definitions that lead to contradictions, like "God is all-powerful, god is good".

    There are no other categories. All attempts to define god in a meaningful, non-contradictory fashion have been shown fallacious.

    --
    Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
  75. Re:It's very poor science in one way... by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

    With regard to the United States, there are easily 100 dictators with the same political agenda: damaging the United States.

    --
    Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
  76. Great Theory - Not New and Half Missing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Great theory - for back in 2008 when it was presented at an ASM conference by Fournier and Alm. Looks like he stapled his ideas on top and neglected to include the gene-transfer that gets you to this point. Without that, it seems more circumstantial than defining (and lacking some of the science part), but taken as a whole picture, it's certainly exciting.

    1. Re:Great Theory - Not New and Half Missing by BioBrian · · Score: 1

      True.

    2. Re:Great Theory - Not New and Half Missing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think the gene transfer and evolution of the pathway and its possible consequences was published by Fournier and Gogarten in 2008, but the actual hypothesis that this timed with the Permian extinction and was a mechanism to explain the geochemical data was not presented until this year by Fournier and Alm, and that work WAS done in collaboration with Rothman's group. So its really two equal parts of the work coming together to make a strong inference.

    3. Re:Great Theory - Not New and Half Missing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ah, my mistake.

  77. Re:This has happened twice ... could it happen aga by jc42 · · Score: 1

    Of course it could happen. You said it yourself it has happened before. What kind of silly question is that?

    It's called a rhetorical question. It's a popular linguistic technique in some circles. ;-)

    --
    Those who do study history are doomed to stand helplessly by while everyone else repeats it.