uziq wrote:
i mean, it's highly likely that material brought in from outer space on superheated rocks was crucial to life starting on this planet in the first place. plus there are any number of organisms and lifeforms that can survive in the most extreme of conditions, whether it's of temperature, pressure, light or lack thereof, salinity or pH, etc.
Personally I think its likely this happened more than once.
just don't look into prions. they are basically indestructible and functionally immortal, and also very very bad news for our nervous systems. and we are contributing to more and more of them being scattered, willy nilly, around habitats and ecosystems every single year.
OK
unnamednewbie13 wrote:
I mean I already have. I just think stuff that can survive in extreme conditions or be woken up like Dracula from a thousand year slumber or whatever are really interesting.
1,000 years seems like a long time from our perspective, for other things it probably isn't.
Novel pathogens for which we have no defence are bad enough.
That we're burning up the few defences we have had for under a century is actually worse.
Front row seats to the Anthropocene Mass Extinction.