mud Type post Date September 1, 2020 CategoriesIntelligent DesignLife Sciences Tagged , amino acids, Antony van Leeuwenhoek, bacteria, biofilms, cable bacteria, carbon dioxide, electrical current, electricity, Elizabeth Pennisi, hydrogen, microbes, proteins, sediments, semiconductors, toxic wastes, University of Maryland, University of New South Wales, University of North Carolina Design Gets Down and Dirty — Complex Specified Information in Electric Mud Science and Culture September 1, 2020 Intelligent Design, Life Sciences 9 Bacteria that conduct electricity with cables may be involved in everything from cleansing the oceans and enriching the soil to guarding our own teeth. Read More ›
Hoilungia-hongkongensis Type post Date August 15, 2018 CategoriesEvolution Tagged , __k-review, acorn worms, Cambrian Explosion, Cambrian News, Darwin's Doubt, Ediacaran Period, electrical current, evolution, Hong Kong, invertebrates, lancelets, mitochondrion, nervous system, neurons, Nobel Prize, phylum, Placozoa, plasticity, PLOS Biology, PNAS, sea urchins, starfish, synaptic transmission, tunicates, vertebrates Placozoa: An Evolutionary Leftover? Science and Culture August 15, 2018 Evolution 7 Simple, small, and worldwide in distribution, the placozoa don’t fit any clear evolutionary picture. Read More ›