Bacterially produced volatile organic compounds (VOCs) can modify growth patterns of eukaryotic hosts and competing/cohabiting microbes. These compounds have been implicated in skin disorders and attraction of biting pests. Current methods to detect and characterize VOCs from microbial cultures can be laborious and low-throughput, making it difficult to understand the behavior of microbial populations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAir oxidation of hydrazine was studied by using a group of kaolinites, halloysites, and substituent oxides as models for the tetrahedral and octahedral sheets. The rate was found to be linear with oxygen. The stoichiometry showed that oxygen was the primary oxidant and that dinitrogen was the only important nitrogen-containing product.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn north-central Oregon a large area of near-zero near-surface conductive heat flow occurs in young volcanic rocks of the Cascade Range. Recent advective heat flux measurements and a heat-budget analysis suggest that ground-water circulation sweeps sufficient heat out of areas where rocks younger than 6 Ma (million years ago) are exposed to account for the anomalously high advective and conductive heat discharge measured in older rocks at lower elevations. Earlier workers have proposed that an extensive midcrustal magmatic heat source is responsible for this anomalously high heat flow.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOrig Life Evol Biosph
December 1996
Carbonaceous residues from a variety of laboratory syntheses yield release patterns for C and H isotopes during stepwise combustion that fail to mimic the striking patterns characteristic of meteoritic kerogen-like residues that otherwise superficially resemble them. It seems likely that the meteoritic material comprises a complex mixture of substances having different origins and/or synthesis conditions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThere are reports of sex chromosomal abnormalities including XXY, XYY, and fragile X karyotypes in autistic individuals, but structural autosomal defects have rarely been reported. This paper presents four patients with autism, mental retardation, minor dysmorphic features, and structural autosomal defects. These patients shared autistic features including fascination with inanimate objects, catastrophic reactions to changes in their environment or their daily routine, echolalia, and poor relatedness; IQ scores indicate mild to severe retardation.
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