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Carpe Diem Ad Muertum
Sieze the day, to the death. There is no potential that shall be passed by, there is no piece of glory to fall by the wayside, there is no soul to left unsaved by the brilliance of language. As writers, we are gods.
Things Learned in Microbiology Class, Part I
These are gonna blow your mind.
Like, seriously warp your brain into different colors.

1) It only took 500 million years for life on Earth to develop. Flash-in-the-pan bio-organic ungodliness of swiftness.
2) There are microbes that are indefinitely self-sufficient - that is to say, they require no other living things to procreate. Think about harvesting those genes, huh? Get you some microbial immortality!
3) Epulopiscium fishelsoni is a bacterium that lives in the guts of surgeonfish and is visible to the naked eye. This thing doesn't even have a nucleus and yet somehow has the metabolism to maintain its 0.5 mm long existence. Fat man needs some Atkins. Could make it a pet.
4) Some microbes, like that producing "desert varnish," may take centuries to divide. {sings} MOOOAAARR immortality...! Albeit decidedly boring...


Fun quotes from my textbook:

"Most of them [bacteria] look like unassuming little sausages..."
-later-
"In this respect, they [pili] resemble grappling hooks (reminiscent of those used by ninjas)."

Why microbes are better than you:
They can survive...
1) 5 megarads of gamma radiation
2) 8 000 ATM (117 000 lbs/in^2)
They can propagate in...
1) between 0 and 11.4 pH
2) between -15 and 121 ˚C
3) 1 300 ATM (18 500 lbs/in^2)
4) 5.2 M NaCl (high osmotic pressure)

This will probably be updated later.

I love this class.

Source: Microbe by Schaechter, Ingraham, and Neidhardt
Inappropriate citing for the win.





 
 
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