Posted by Steven Goodheart on May 31, 2010 · 7 Comments
As readers of my Extreme Science blog know, I try to bring to people’s attention the environmental disaster Earth’s ocean’s face if humanity doesn’t radically change its relationship to our planet. Here are some past posts on the subject: We’re Killing Our Oceans Global Warming and the Loss of Earth’s Coral Reefs The Moral Math … Continue reading →
Filed under biochemistry, biology, chemistry, environmental-science, ethics, genetics, life-science, meteorology, oceanography, science, zoology · Tagged with AAAS, AAAS-oil-spill, Alcanivorax-borkumensis, bacteria, BP-Oil, BP-Oil-Disaster, British-Petroleum, Deepwater-Horizon, Deepwater-Horizon-oil-spill, digest-oil, disaster, Exxon-Valdez, Gulf-ecosystem, Gulf-of-Mexico, Gulf-of-Mexico-oil-spill, hurricane, Loop-Current, moral-imperative, multinational-corporations, non-toxic-solution, oil-disaster, oil-eating-bacteria, oil-eating-microbe, oil-spill, save-our-planet, save-the-Gulf
Posted by Steven Goodheart on January 6, 2010 · 1 Comment
One of the best science books I read in 2009 was Life Ascending: The Ten Great Inventions of Evolution by biochemist Nick Lane. Although I think I have a good basic understanding of fundamental biological processes, I didn’t find the book an easy read, frankly. This is no criticism of Lane’s writing. The biological processes … Continue reading →
Filed under biochemistry, biology, botany, chemistry, earth-science, environmental-science, evolution, geology, life-science, nature, oceanography, science · Tagged with animals, bacteria, complex-cell, consciousness, death, DNA, evolution, hot-blood, inventions-of-evolution, movement, multi-celled-organism, Nick-Lane, oceans, origin-of-life, oxygen, Pale-Blue-Dot, sex, sight, wonder