Posts Tagged ‘microbiology’

Watch Man-Controlled Bacteria Build a Nanoscale Pyramid

Friday, March 26th, 2010

Forget nanobots. Who needs ‘em? Since apparently we can now directly control live bacteria, and make them do our bidding. I’m in awe.

The feat was accomplished—and extensively documented in the video above—by researchers at the NanoRobotics Laboratory of the École Polytechnique de Montréal. The bacteria in question are known as magnetotactic bacteria, which have internal compasses that respond to the pull of a magnetic field. The research team used just such a magnetic field to bunch the bacteria together en masse and manipulate their movements to accomplish simple tasks.

While assembling a pyramid is a fun exercise, the practical applications down the road may involve nanobots after all. The scientists have already navigated a grouping of bacteria through the blood stream of a rat; in the future, they’ll use that same technique to create a bacterial propulsion system for larger nanobots.

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“EdgeScience Magazine” Launched

Monday, October 5th, 2009

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The Society for Scientific Exploration has launched a new magazine called EdgeScience.

Why EdgeScience? Because, contrary to public perception, scientific knowledge is still full of unknowns. What remains to be discovered—what we don’t know—very likely dwarfs what we do know. And what we think we know may not be entirely correct or fully understood. Anomalies, which researchers tend to sweep under the rug, should be actively pursued as clues to potential breakthroughs and new directions in science.

Download the first issue as a PDF.

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Humans are 90% Microbes

Tuesday, September 22nd, 2009

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The Human Microbiome Project is analyzing the human body to determine it’s non-human components. Only 10% of our bodies are composed of human cells while the other 90% is composed of bacteria, viruses and other microbes that make life possible. (Human cells are much larger than microbes so this percentage is by cell population, not by volume.)

Just like an ant colony or planet Earth (according to the Gaia Hypothesis), humans are super-organisms. What happens when a superorganism becomes aware of itself? Why the Overall Effect of course.

Perhaps the accumulated electro-magnetic discharge of our human minds and bodies combined with that of billions of tiny organisms within is what imbues us with consciousness and sparks our feelings of oneness as we toggle our scale sliders.

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Telepathic DNA

Thursday, July 16th, 2009

Does DNA exhibit telepathy? Apparently – it does.

“..homology recognition between sequences of several hundred nucleotides occurs without physical contact or presence of proteins. Double helixes of DNA can recognize matching molecules from a distance and then gather together, all seemingly without help from any other molecules or chemical signals. This recognition effect may help increase the accuracy and efficiency of the homologous recombination of genes, which is a process responsible for DNA repair, evolution, and genetic diversity.”

Is the human blueprint evolutionarily hardwired for psi?

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