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Meet the hemimastigote — 11 Comments

  1. MikeK’s got it.

    When I had a good college bio course in the early 70’s, there was only a plant and animal kingdom at top, or is it bottom, of the tree of life. (Check out one of the “tree of life” entries at Wikipedia.) Then I read the book “Rare Earth.” At the beginning of the tree are three “domains” Bacteria, Archea, and Eukaryota. Now the kingdoms are subsets to these domains.

  2. A terrific story I remember about extremophiles is that many decades ago some oil company scientist carefully brought up a bore sample from a mile deep or more, and found living single cell organisms. The material hadn’t seen sunlight or oxygen or carbon dioxide for millions of years, yet there was life.

    All of the “important” scientists said that this researcher must have contaminated his sample. It just couldn’t be true. If I recall correctly, a decade or two was lost, before the bio community figured out that these were extremophiles that were living off of something like hydrogen sulfide. Impossible! Preposterous!

    It’s not just that famous scientists are sometimes jerks. In this case, it’s an indication of how great the discovery was.

  3. They can’t even agree on the domain name: Eukaryota or Eucarya?

    Sounds like the hemimastigote is something like a pre-eukaryote, in which case it could deserve its own domain; or an early eukaryote, in which case it deserves it’s own kingdom. In Neo’s linked article they say its deserves it’s own supra-kingdom. Something in between? I don’t think that is an actual thing, … yet.

    I thought the link within the cbc link was interesting too. A eukaryote (a different one) that does not have any mitochondria.

  4. Dirt samples appear to be a common means of discovery. Visiting professionals to our laboratory from pharmaceutical houses often were equipped with sample bags and asked to bring back dirt from where-ever. One group from the U.K.was looking for new antibiotic possibilities; Missouri River mud was a real treat.

    Mostly they brought home dirt and mud; occasionally……..

  5. Yackums,

    “Ee-e-e-wwww!” *Holds nose, as is de rigueur when assailed by a good pun*

  6. With every such discovery of life where “it can’t possibly exist”, the chances increase of us discovering extraterrestrial life on other planets, both in our own solar system and outside.

    Given mass and energy, and sufficient time to self-organise, life will appear nearly everywhere. Furthermore, given sufficient time, that life can evolve to the point of intelligence and self-awareness.

    Exciting stuff!

  7. Given sufficient time and self awareness sentient beings will realize socialism doesn’t work, unfortunately we live in the present.

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