In a new "astromycological" venture launched in conjunction with NASA , [Paul] Stamets and various research teams are studying how fungi can be leveraged to build extraterrestrial habitats and perhaps someday even terraform planets.
[Scientific American:] How can Earth's fungi help with the development of human habitats or even entire ecosystems on other planets?
Bloomberg - Are you a robot?
The new reality of UFOs: An interview with journalist Leslie Kean | Space
Leslie Kean is a veteran investigative reporter who has spent over 20 years delving into the once-taboo topic of unidentified flying objects (UFOs). UFOs are now established as real, she says.
While Kean has never seen a UFO, her own close encounters with hundreds of government documents, aviation reports, radar data and case studies with corroborating physical evidence, as well as interviews of dozens of high-level officials and aviation witnesses from around the world, have bolstered
The Astrobiological Potential of Rogue Planets | Daily Planet | Air & Space Magazine
If a wandering planet passes close to a habitable rocky planet within a solar system, the outer layer of the rogue planet might be torn apart by gravitational disturbances, and the resulting debris could end up on the habitable world.
Alternatively, the two planets could collide, or come close to colliding. This is generally believed to have a sterilizing effect, as when a Mars-sized object (probably a rogue planet!) collided with the early Earth, resulting in the creation of our Moon.
Fortnite Alien Devices - where to collect them and activate the Countermeasure Device |
Fortnite Alien Devices are needed to strike back at the extraterrestrial invaders, by using them to activate the Countermeasure Device underneath Corny Complex.
To get started on this quest you need to collect three Fortnite Alien Devices, which look like floating purple balls and can be tricky to spot as they blend into their surroundings.
Volcanic eruptions may have spurred first 'whiffs' of oxygen in Earth's atmosphere | UW News
Roger Buick in 2004 at the Mount McRae Shale in Western Australia. Rocks drilled near here show "whiffs" of oxygen occurred before the Great Oxidation Event, 2.4 billion years ago.
A new analysis of 2.5-billion-year-old rocks from Australia finds that volcanic eruptions may have stimulated population surges of marine microorganisms, creating the first puffs of oxygen into the atmosphere.
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We asked the question, what is a Ginkgo worth? One of the largest biotech IPOs (via a SPAC) ever for Ginkgo Biowor… https://t.co/fQ34VDwKsn antonioregalado (from regalado@technologyreview.com) Tue Aug 24 16:11:37 +0000 2021
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