Japan Earthquake | Page 2122

  • @M.I.A. the fda contradicts the iaea.
    by Edano 8/11/2011 4:47:16 PM

  • Fukushima could exacerbate population woes www.csmonitor.com
    by lillymunster 8/11/2011 4:48:58 PM

  • by Edano via English.kyodonews.jp 8/11/2011 4:49:13 PM

  • the japanese live in a fantasy world. the guy left is a minister.
    by Edano 8/11/2011 4:50:31 PM

  • @Edano Telling, isn't it? The IAEA with an nuclear agenda, the FDA with a different mission...Why is 'smile' in English and not Japanese?
    by M.I.A. 8/11/2011 4:50:52 PM

  • @M.I.A. fda is doctors, iaea is techno dinos
    by Edano 8/11/2011 4:52:01 PM

  • @Edano part of the IAEA mandate is to promote nuclear power. They have a built in conflict of interest
    by lillymunster 8/11/2011 4:53:07 PM

  • @Edano Why is Hello Kitty giving him an award?
    by lillymunster 8/11/2011 4:53:44 PM

  • @lillymunster LOL :) english.kyodonews.jp
    by Edano 8/11/2011 4:54:24 PM

  • "internal affairs minister Yoshihiro Katayama (L)" ON THE LEFT !
    by Edano 8/11/2011 4:55:32 PM

  • @M.I.A. I noticed looking at data and reports on Hanford that some agencies clearly had a bias and others seemed more interested in facts. IE the CDC played "nothing wrong here" while the National Academy of Sciences dealt strictly with the data and methodology and used that to point out the flaws in the CDC's assumptions.
    by lillymunster 8/11/2011 4:55:34 PM

  • @Edano with how effective the central govt. has been lately maybe Hello Kitty should give him a punch. :-)
    by lillymunster 8/11/2011 4:56:09 PM

  • @lillymunster Seems alot of this bias goes even to PERSONAL conflicts of interest- jobs, perks, power and institutional fear. :((
    by M.I.A. 8/11/2011 4:57:29 PM

  • @M.I.A. yes. I have also seen it the other way sometimes too where someone is so bent on proving something they go beyond facts or misinterpret them. Sadly, it is usually those trying to operate in an unbiased way that get stuck in the middle.
    by lillymunster 8/11/2011 4:58:40 PM

  • I think Hello Kitty should run for Kan's job.
    by lillymunster 8/11/2011 4:58:56 PM

  • somehow we missed that:

    Thursday August 11 2011, 13:31:22 UTC 3 hours ago near the east coast of Honshu, Japan 5.2 9.9 quakes.globalincidentmap.com
    by Edano 8/11/2011 5:05:19 PM

  • I'm running away! be back later
    by lillymunster 8/11/2011 5:13:21 PM

  • E. coli metabolism reversed for speedy production of fuels, chemicals
    In a biotechnological tour de force, Rice University engineering researchers this week unveiled a new method for rapidly converting simple glucose into biofuels and petrochemical substitutes. In a paper published online in Nature, Rice's team described how it reversed one of the most efficient of all metabolic pathways -- the beta oxidation cycle -- to engineer bacteria that produce biofuel at a breakneck pace.
    More: www.physorg.com
    by joniver 8/11/2011 5:35:13 PM

  • @joniver Very cool. Game-changing in fact.
    by RadioGuy 8/11/2011 5:40:33 PM

  • seanbonner
    RT @safecastdotorg Majirox News: Safecast launches map with 500,000 radiation measurements www.majiroxnews.com
    by elainekirk 8/11/2011 5:41:13 PM

  • Scary implications when such a bacteria gets into the wild, though.
    by RadioGuy 8/11/2011 5:41:23 PM

  • @RadioGuy I thought the same...how do you stop it from getting into the natural world.
    by joniver 8/11/2011 5:47:01 PM

  • And we've seen all to often how wel e. coli spreads
    by RadioGuy 8/11/2011 5:48:20 PM

  • @RadioGuy Fodder for a sci-fi flick.
    by joniver 8/11/2011 5:48:23 PM

  • @RadioGuy @joniver it is safe and if some did waft oer the population they will just raise the limit easy peasy
    by elainekirk 8/11/2011 5:48:29 PM

  • a bacteria that if it gets into your system eats all the glucose your body needs to run itself and turns it to bio-fuel? Nasty.
    by RadioGuy 8/11/2011 5:49:16 PM

  • @elainekirk No immediate risk to human health.
    by RadioGuy 8/11/2011 5:49:58 PM

  • @RadioGuy Okay you've convinced me it's not a good idea.
    by joniver 8/11/2011 5:51:16 PM

  • From the trailer... Big voice guy: "The world made oil more important than food, until the food struck back! It's Midas come to the Oil Age in "No Thanks, It Gives Me Gas."
    by RadioGuy 8/11/2011 5:55:17 PM

  • @joniver @RadioGuy i thought the same when we talked about the metal consuming bacteria. they may be good for cs137, but do we really want to have them in nature ?
    by Edano 8/11/2011 5:56:28 PM

  • this kind of science is really dangerous.
    by Edano 8/11/2011 5:58:47 PM

  • Also from the trailer: "Where do you think all that oil came from last time. Muahahahahahahaaaaa." ;)
    by RadioGuy 8/11/2011 5:59:53 PM

  • @Edano Yes, but what could possibly go wrong?
    by RadioGuy 8/11/2011 6:00:23 PM

  • during my studies at university i wrote something about plasmid injection into viruses. nasty, nasty, but meanwhile they do it all over the world as a routine.
    by Edano 8/11/2011 6:00:51 PM

  • @RadioGuy a flock of meatal consuming bacteria in a reactor pressure vessel ? hmmmm delicious.
    by Edano 8/11/2011 6:02:00 PM

  • I always think of the question "Yes, but what do they learn to eat when they run out of that?"
    by RadioGuy 8/11/2011 6:02:51 PM

  • Are these bacteria manipulated so they can't reproduce?
    by joniver 8/11/2011 6:06:50 PM

  • @joniver :) you think of jurassic park ?
    by Edano 8/11/2011 6:07:36 PM

  • @Edano Always, when I think of the amount of genetic tinkering going on.
    by joniver 8/11/2011 6:09:05 PM

  • @joniver bacterias have no sex, they just divide and then they are double the sum. it's their nature. you cannot remove it. :)
    by Edano 8/11/2011 6:10:06 PM

  • @Edano How about giving them a very limited lifespan?
    by joniver 8/11/2011 6:11:12 PM

  • @joniver you can just remove their food and they will die out.
    by Edano 8/11/2011 6:12:02 PM

  • except for some special species which can turn into stealth mode. very nasty.
    by Edano 8/11/2011 6:12:46 PM

  • Study of Macondo oil spill in the Gulf puzzles scientists
    Microbial activity within the Macondo oil slick was much more effective at reducing the oil than predicted, according to a study by the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution. A report scheduled for release today noted that the bacteria in the slick degraded the oil five times faster than the bacteria outside the slick.

    The WHOI release said the study team was taken aback by the ability of the microbes in the Gulf of Mexico to breakdown the oil in the first place.

    “We thought microbe respiration was going to be minimal,” said WHOI chemist and senior study author Benjamin Van Mooy. “We found that the answer (to how the microbes reacted) was ‘quick’ by a lot.”

    The investigators found that bacteria responded at a very high rate based on measuring changes in the oxygen levels of water taken from the slick.

    Van Mooy said he is not sure what fraction of the oil removal is due to microbes, as there were other contributors including evaporation, dilution, and dispersion, but the five-fold increase suggested that the bacteria contributed significantly.

    “Extrapolating our observations to the entire area of the oil slick supports the assertion microbes had the potential to degrade a large fraction of the oil as it arrived at the surface from the well,” the researchers said in their paper.

    The lead author of the paper, Bethanie Edwards, said the study indicates “that microbes had the metabolic potential to break down a large portion of hydrocarbons and keep up with the flow rate from the wellhead.”

    Beyond the facts of the study, Edwards postulated that molecules not accessible to the bacteria persist and could have a toxic effect in the food chain. She also noted that the oil was converted to CO2 which was released into the atmosphere.

    Follow-up studies are going to investigate what happened to the energy generated by the digestion. A mystery to the scientists is why the oil-eating microbes did not seem to use that energy to reproduce at the predicted rate.
    www.offshore-mag.com
    by joniver 8/11/2011 6:13:45 PM

  • they can deactivate themselves and reactivate when they have food. botox bacteria does that, e.g.
    by Edano 8/11/2011 6:14:04 PM

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