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Lottie Peppers

Giant, ancient viruses are thawing out in Siberia - and they're changing everything we ... - 0 views

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    Last month, researchers announced they were studying a 30,000-year-old giant virus called Mollivirus sibericum that they found in melted Siberian permafrost. The virus was functional and able to infect amoeba. This isn't the first time researchers have found big viruses that have challenged what we thought we knew about the tiny invaders. Mimivirus, discovered in 2003, has 1,200 genes and is twice the width of traditional viruses.
Lottie Peppers

Ancient fossil may rewrite fish family tree | Science/AAAS | News - 0 views

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    When it comes to charting the tree of life, the most important difference between humans and sharks isn't limbs versus fins or even lungs versus gills. It all comes down to our skeletons. Sharks' skeletons are made of cartilage, placing them along with rays and skates in a group of jawed vertebrates called cartilaginous fish. Humans-along with most other living vertebrates-belong to the same group as bony fish, whose skeletons are made of bone. Scientists knew that these groups diverged more than 420 million years ago, but what the last common ancestor looked like remained a mystery. Now, new discoveries inside the head of a small fossil fish from Siberia may provide some clues.
Lottie Peppers

Giant Virus Resurrected from Permafrost After 30,000 Years - Yahoo News - 0 views

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    In recent years, Claverie and his colleagues have discovered a host of giant viruses, which are as big as bacteria but lack characteristic cellular machinery and metabolism of those microorganisms. At least one family of these viruses likely evolved from single-celled parasites after losing essential genes, although the origins of other giant viruses remain a mystery, Claverie said.
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