A Scientist Is Growing Asparagus In Meteorites To Prepare Us For Space Farming
Jason Koebler writes: For those of us without a green thumb, growing even the most hardy plants in perfect conditions can seem impossible. How about trying to grow plants on a meteorite? Well, at least one scientist is doing it, with moderate levels of success. "People have been talking about terraforming, but what I'm trying to do is give some concrete evidence that it's possible to do this, that it's possible to grow in extraterrestrial materials," Michael Mautner, one of the world's only "astroecologists" said. "What I've found is that a range of microorganisms—bacteria, fungi, and even asparagus and potato plants—can survive with the nutrients that are in extraterrestrial materials."
Onions but not onions. Asparagus but not asparagus. Taste the same but different.
Scientist will be dead and forgotten long before anyone does any space farming in space.
How big of an meteorite would one need for a valid proof of concept? Also, in order to create atmosphere, a large shake and bake bag of CO2 for said meteorite? Can the roots grab hold onto said meteorite? Maybe a bit celophane tape to hold the seeds on the meteorite till the roots take hold?
I know how stupid this is going to sound; but couldn't one test this out by taking a large meteorite fragment up to the ISS and test there? I know what I just said.
I'd worry about metals and other trace elements lightly poisoning the plants. Meteorites and other airless worlds have not had water scrubbing the rocks for eons, washing things out, much less plants and bacteria growing there and sapping it millions of times over prior to your lil' cute vegetable garden making an appearance.
(-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
After all, it's the same atoms from one end of the universe to the other, so what has he proven?
Given the conditions on Earth, you can use atoms from space to grow plants?
Yippee. We kinda knew that.
What does that have to do with space? Once you remove our gravity, atmosphere and magnetosphere, *that's* when it gets hard...
If we can grow asparagus and potatoes, that means we can grow food for our food!
That said, we kinda need more variety than that, and I'd guess that the specimens in question are somewhat lacking the full range of nutrients they might here.
~/ssh slashdot.org ssh: connect to host slashdot.org port 22: too many beers
Realistically, Mars or the moon is where we'd be going first. An aquaponics setup would make the most logical sense for a starter colony to provide fish, oxygen and fuel(algae), radiation protection, recycling of urine, etc... With composting of human fecal matter through concentrated solar to produce biochar and hot water. Then usage of dust, pebbles, rocks, from digging out habitats, some for concrete, some for drainage, some for soil(biochar and compost) amendment.
All of which is doable right now and since life tends to always find a way, you'll get your specialized bacteria soon enough.
Don't complain about syntax, grammar, or spelling. There is no.hell like input on android.
The Irish will inherit the asteroid belt!
While other people, fittingly, will probably colonize the other planets, leaving them nothing but the asteroid belt.
Just ask a marijuana grower. They have the ability to grow that plant almost anywhere! In caves, basements and beer vats.
“Meteorite” means a rock that has already fallen from the sky, and we have plenty of those. A rock still floating around in space is called an “asteroid”.
And just in case you’re unsure what those other words mean, when you go outside “sky” is what's above your head, “rock” is what your head is made of, and “space” is like what's inside your head except it isn’t as close to a perfect vacuum.
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seriously, if that's all there is to eat, screw it, i'll stay on earth.
Liking asparagus I find only one problem, your urine will really reek worse than stale beer pee. Tonight's asparagus is tomorrows skunked orange juice.
and "Space" is what is between your ears and eyes! Go work for NASA you dumb twat. LOL
In space, no one can smell your pee. "Why does the recycled water taste funny?"
Why does this story bring "Invasion of the Body Snatchers" (http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0049366/) to mind?
Circle the wagons and fire inward. Entropy increases without bounds.
It's really good.
Comprehension skill fail: you merely paraphrased what I said. Come back when you can demonstrate greater intelligence than a parrot.
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where no one can smell your piss
Women are like that, psycho. It's how they control men, he can control her by physically shoving her around, but she can control him by pushing his psychologically active buttons till he collapses crying I can't take it anymore. It's how nature made us. Hell hath no fury like a woman scorned.
imagine how bad your urine will smell after eating asparagus that was watered with recycled asparagus urine...
The researcher didn't really grow anything on meteorites. He looked at the chemical composition and concluded most plants could grown in soil with those components. Then they mixed up a batch and demonstrated that it wasn't toxic.
The sun will sterilize everything and ion storms will strip atmospheres away unless you have a magnetic shield of some sort. If the core of the planet is frozen then no luck
Asparagus in a closed environment sounds like a horrible idea. Can you turn a fan on in the lavatory on a space station or bio dome on a space rock? I mean... ewwww.
I'm allergic to asparagus, you insensitive clod!!
OK, if you are going to make us drink our own pee, can you NOT base our diet around Asparagus? k thx bye!
Have you all not seen the episode of Doctor Who "The Waters of Mars" where there was a hidden intelligent virus inside the water supply on the planet? What if something of the sort was in the meteorite or asteroid they decide to try to plant food in?
Props for trying to find ways for humans to survive in the future, but I do not think this is such a great idea---sounds like a disaster waiting to happen.