DISCOVER Magazine. Science, Technology and The Future
Current Issue
Subscribe Today »
  • Renew
  • Give a Gift
  • Archives
  • Customer Service
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Newsletter
  • Health & Medicine
  • Mind & Brain
  • Technology
  • Space
  • Human Origins
  • Living World
  • Environment
  • Physics & Math
  • Video
  • Photos
  • Podcast
  • RSS
Science Not Fiction
« Indiana Jones and the Interplanetary Space Drive
Jurassic Park Watch: Ancient-People Poo »

It’s Life, Jim, But Not as We Know it

AndromedaIn both A&E’s recent remake of The Andromeda Strain, and the 1971 version of the Micheal Crichton novel, scientists are confronted with a microscopic invader, Andromeda, that has none of the trappings that we associated with life, but which is definitely alive. It grows, reproduces and evolves—all without the benefit of DNA, amino acids, water, or the complex carbon-based proteins that make all life as we know it tick. Instead, Andromeda appears to be crystalline in nature.

Is such a lifeform possible? To know the answer to that question would mean we would know the “laws of life,” the topic of a panel at the first World Science Festival in New York. On the panel were Steven Benner, Paul Davies, and Maggie Turnbull, who are all engaged in the search for those laws in their own way. Davies and Turnbull are astrobiologists, hoping to find answers in extraterrestrial life, either in our solar system or around another star. If we do find extra-terrestrial life, we can, as Davies put it, compare that life to our own and then start to figure out what’s really fundamental about life, and what are “frozen accidents” of evolution peculiar to life on Earth (such as having five fingers on each hand). Benner is taking a different tack, trying to find the ultimate limits on life by creating synthetic biological systems totally different from anything else on Earth, such as DNA with not just the four base pairs common to life on Earth (base pairs constitute the ‘alphabet’ in which an organism’s genetic code is written), but as many as twelve base pairs.

Happily for Andromeda Strain fans, with our current knowledge base, all of the scientists seemed perfectly fine with the notion of crystalline life forms, with Turnbell arguing that at the end of the day, there may be no sharp line that divides living, biological, systems from non-living, abiotic, systems, and Davies noted the hypothesis of Alexander Graham Cairns-Smith, which postulates that life got its start on Earth in the form of self-replicating clay crystals.

Share

June 2nd, 2008 Tags: Exobiology, synthetic biology, The Andromeda Strain, World Science Festival
by Stephen Cass in Aliens | 0 comments | RSS feed | Trackback >

Leave a Reply





    • About Science Not Fiction

      Sometime in the future, a group of renegade scientists and technologists will take a time machine to now. They're spilling the secrets of tomorrow here at Discover's Science Not Fiction blog.

      ▪ Malcolm MacIver is a bioengineer at Northwestern University who studies the neural and biomechanical basis of animal intelligence. He consults for sci-fi films (Tron Legacy, Joss Whedon's The Avengers), and was the science advisor for Caprica. He covers AI and robotics for Science Not Fiction.

      ▪ Kyle Munkittrick (Web, Twitter) is program director at the Institute for Ethics and Emerging Technologies. He covers transhumanism.

    • Subscribe

      The RSS feed for Science Not Fiction is here RSS.

    • 80beats

      Categories

      Categories

      • Aging (or Not)
      • Aliens
      • Animation
      • Apocalypse
      • Artificial Intelligence
      • Astronomy
      • Biology
      • Biotech
      • Biowarfare
      • Books
      • Cars
      • Chemistry
      • Codex Futurius
      • Comics
      • Computers
      • Conferences
      • Cyborgs
      • Electronics
      • Energy
      • Engineering
      • Genetics
      • Geology
      • Materials
      • Mathematics
      • Media
      • Medicine
      • Meta
      • Mind & Brain
      • Movies
      • Nanotech
      • Neuroscience
      • Philosophy
      • Physics
      • Politics
      • Psychology
      • Robots
      • Security
      • Space
      • Space Flight
      • The Singularity
      • Theatre
      • Time Travel
      • Top Posts
      • Transhumanism
      • Transportation
      • TV
      • Uncategorized
      • Utter Nerd
      • Video Games
      • Weapons
      Archives

      Archives

      • October 2011
      • September 2011
      • August 2011
      • July 2011
      • June 2011
      • May 2011
      • April 2011
      • March 2011
      • February 2011
      • January 2011
      • December 2010
      • November 2010
      • October 2010
      • September 2010
      • August 2010
      • July 2010
      • June 2010
      • October 2009
      • September 2009
      • August 2009
      • July 2009
      • June 2009
      • May 2009
      • April 2009
      • March 2009
      • February 2009
      • January 2009
      • December 2008
      • November 2008
      • October 2008
      • September 2008
      • August 2008
      • July 2008
      • June 2008
      • May 2008


  • Kalmbach Publishing Co.

    Copyright © 2012, Kalmbach Publishing Co.

    Privacy - Terms - Reader Services - Subscribe Today - Advertise - About Us