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Time Travel Discussion
The Creation of Man
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<blockquote data-quote="Dmitri" data-source="post: 16967" data-attributes="member: 397"><p><strong>Re: The Creation of Man</strong></p><p></p><p></p><p>StarLord, </p><p>Bacteria are wonderfully fit for that. L. Orgel worked on life origin all his life and then decided, and wrote a paper about it with F. Crick, that panspermia is the realistic option. He wrote: "<em>You could take E. coli and rapidly cool it to 10? K and leave it for 10 billion years and then put it back in glucose, and I suspect you would have 99 percent survival." </em>Bacterial spores are so well protected that they survive hundreds of millions of years in coal deposits. Some bacteria live in boiling springs. Viruses are even more stable. It looks they are much more stable and protected than earth environments would require. I guess they are made to be so.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Dmitri, post: 16967, member: 397"] [b]Re: The Creation of Man[/b] StarLord, Bacteria are wonderfully fit for that. L. Orgel worked on life origin all his life and then decided, and wrote a paper about it with F. Crick, that panspermia is the realistic option. He wrote: "[i]You could take E. coli and rapidly cool it to 10? K and leave it for 10 billion years and then put it back in glucose, and I suspect you would have 99 percent survival." [/i]Bacterial spores are so well protected that they survive hundreds of millions of years in coal deposits. Some bacteria live in boiling springs. Viruses are even more stable. It looks they are much more stable and protected than earth environments would require. I guess they are made to be so. [/QUOTE]
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