Well so it begins.

129 points

On first glance it seems that this worm was brought back to life with scientific intervention exclusively. But with the disappearence of permafrost these worms will thaw on their own and will resume living and procreating. What I want to say is, that many species of these ice-aged worms may be alive already without anyone noticing, trough permafrost has been thawed away. Who knows what impact these worms will have on our recent fauna and flora?

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68 points
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Maybe they’ll save us all from climate change?

Come on little guys, we’re counting on you because corporations and politicians aren’t really helping

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47 points

I’d bet on the worms over the oligarchy

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11 points

One day the worms will eat all of us, even the oligarchs

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15 points
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I wouldn’t count on it…

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4 points

If you walk without rhythm … huh! Ya never learn.

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8 points

Stop :(

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1 point

Someone call Michael Gross.

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1 point
Deleted by creator
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81 points

This will definitely end well….

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65 points

Put it back.

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48 points

This is kind of like time travel in a way. If one were to go back in time, you would mainly need to worry about the diseases and parasites you bring back with you. You are descended from those who learned to survive the diseases of the past so you are likely to have some resistance to it. You wouldn’t be perfectly safe of course, but not likely at more risk than if you stayed in your own time.

On the other hand, if you travel forward in time, like this nematode did, you are entering a realm that is full of virus, bacteria, and even fungus that have had decades to learn new tricks to survive that you would have no inherent resistance to.

The chance of there being some sleeping time bomb in the permafrost seems low to me since everything alive today is descended from those who survived that germ or parasite in the past.

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11 points

Good point. I never thaught about it this way. Maybe these nematodes will not introduce diseases. But will they suppress recent fauna? Will these worms displace current worms or other species on a microbiological level? Or maybe these worms have a cure for recent diseases?

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3 points

They could have also just been endemic to that area, and a host’s resistance possibly linked to a recessive gene. (like sickle cell and malaria in Africa) Following their period of removal from the environment, and with the traveling and immigration of humans and other animals, those genes could be dominated by another form or missing altogether.

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-5 points
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time travel in a way

maybe worms know a thing or two about traveling through space-time wormholes

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35 points

It’s the “Thing”

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2 points
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We need Kurt Russell ASAP w/ a sombrero and a helo.

/I bought that sombrero, 600$. I can’t afford a helo sorry to say. But I want to cosplay his character. Great movie!

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1 point

I came here to say this, but you beat me to the punch so have an upvote instead 🫡

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Mildly Interesting

!mildlyinteresting@lemmy.world

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This is for strictly mildly interesting material. If it’s too interesting, it doesn’t belong. If it’s not interesting, it doesn’t belong.

This is obviously an objective criteria, so the mods are always right. Or maybe mildly right? Ahh… what do we know?

Just post some stuff and don’t spam.

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