a Lurker comments (was J3)
Marshall, C. W.
(12 Jan 2019 15:44 UTC)
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Re: [TML] a Lurker comments (was J3)
Evyn MacDude
(13 Jan 2019 21:38 UTC)
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Re: [TML] a Lurker comments (was J3)
shadow@xxxxxx
(18 Jan 2019 16:39 UTC)
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Re: [TML] a Lurker comments (was J3)
Richard Aiken
(24 Jan 2019 00:05 UTC)
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Re: [TML] a Lurker comments (was J3) shadow@xxxxxx (25 Jan 2019 05:40 UTC)
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Re: [TML] a Lurker comments (was J3)
Tim
(25 Jan 2019 07:03 UTC)
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Re: [TML] a Lurker comments (was J3)
shadow@xxxxxx
(26 Jan 2019 16:57 UTC)
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Re: [TML] a Lurker comments (was J3)
Tim
(26 Jan 2019 23:52 UTC)
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Re: [TML] a Lurker comments (was J3)
Bruce Johnson
(27 Jan 2019 19:37 UTC)
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On 23 Jan 2019 at 19:05, Richard Aiken wrote: > On Fri, Jan 18, 2019 at 11:39 AM shadow at shadowgard.com (via tml > list) <xxxxxx@simplelists.com> wrote: > > This comic might be appropriate: > http://humoncomics.com/mother-gaia > > I like that. Especially the human's expression in the final panel . . Short of buildiong a "planet buster", I don't think humanity is *capable* of affecting the deep rock bacteria ecosystem. We'd have trouble doing much to the deep thermal vents ecosystems in the oceans too. Even our worst pollution/climate change/extinction scanarios don't hold a candle to what the discovery of photosynthesis did to life on earth. > I remember something about a truly alien biology being not only > stranger than we imagine, but stranger than we *can* imagine. That was J.B.S Haldane talking about the universe. > If we keep heading in the current direction, we're going to find out > exactly what an alien ecology is like, as we'll have created it. -- Try to find Hal Clement's "The Nitrogen Fix". Bioengineering gone wrong. -- Leonard Erickson (aka shadow) shadow at shadowgard dot com