[Gasification] conversion of CO2 into methane (Off Topic)

bayent bayent at ns.sympatico.ca
Mon Apr 18 18:52:47 CDT 2016


    
Certainly interesting to this humble wood aholic:)


Sent from my Bell Samsung device over Canada's largest network.

-------- Original message --------
From: Greg Manning <a31ford at gmail.com> 
Date: 2016-04-18  7:57 PM  (GMT-04:00) 
To: Discussion of biomass pyrolysis and gasification <gasification at lists.bioenergylists.org> 
Subject: Re: [Gasification] conversion of CO2 into methane (Off Topic) 

Doug... I for one, find it very interesting if you kept this conversation ON LIST even though it is, as you said. Off topic. I do indeed find it of interest. 
Does anyone else find it interesting ???
Greg Manning
On Feb 2, 2016 8:36 PM, "Doug Williams" <doug.williams.nz at gmail.com> wrote:


Hi Dr Karve,



Not sure you are directing your question to the right forum, but as it's CO2 and methane, guess it qualifies, but never thought my own interest in this humble cell form would be useful to anyone(:-)



Archaea having been around for 3-4 billion years are the ultimate colonist of any environment, survival being that they arrive at their destination from where ever they come from. Even if there was not the chemistry present to feed directly, they can also take in energy from Sunlight and convert this to feed. Mutation is rapid, given the environmental chemistry would also changing around them over a few million years or so. Time doesn't seem to matter and they keep multiplying to suit their environment. They can now be found in just about every thing on this planet,so I'm sure carbonic acid was considered ideal nutrient.



Given that your interest is of their participation in digestive processes and the evolution of methane, one can only guess that the building blocks allowing their evolution branching into bacteria one way, and eucaryota the other, they had plenty of places to turn host nutrient into methane. My own interest is their function within the human gut, evidenced by their methane production and distinctive smell, and how they might be involved with the matrix of peptides on which warm blooded cells of life forms build.



It may be better to discuss this privately rather than be off topic.



Regards,

Doug Williams,

Fluidyne.



  On Mon, 1 Feb 2016 09:23:11 +0530

Anand Karve <adkarve at gmail.com> wrote:



> When the archaea arrived on the earth, the earth's atmosphere had mainly

> nitrogen and carbon dioxide.  How did they survivet? I have been thinking

> on it.  CO2 forms H2CO3 when it combines with water.  Did they use this

> carbonic acid as food? (2H2CO3=CH4 + CO2)

> Yours

> A.D.Karve

> ***

> Dr. A.D. Karve

>

> Chairman, Samuchit Enviro Tech Pvt Ltd (www.samuchit.com)

>

> Trustee & Founder President, Appropriate Rural Technology Institute (ARTI)





--

Doug Williams <Doug.Williams.nz at gmail.com>



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