The geochemical origin of microbes
Language: English Publication details: CRC Press 2024 Boca RatonDescription: xiii, 234pISBN:- 9781032457673
- 579.3 M365g
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() |
PK Kelkar Library, IIT Kanpur | General Stacks | 579.3 M365g (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | A186622 |
Browsing PK Kelkar Library, IIT Kanpur shelves, Collection: General Stacks Close shelf browser (Hides shelf browser)
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
||
579.1757 P935S2 PRINCIPLES AND APPLICATIONS OF SOIL MICROBIOLOGY | 579.176 C365g2 Ground-water microbiologu and geochemistry [2nd ed.] | 579.3 F351b3 Bacterial biogeochemistry [3rd ed.] | 579.3 M365g The geochemical origin of microbes | 579.3 SI64b5 Bacteria in biology, biotechnology and medicine [5th ed.] | 579.3135 B533b4 Bacterial and bacteriophage genetics [4th ed.] | 579.342 B453E E. COLI IN MOTION |
This is a textbook covering the transition from energy releasing reactions on the early Earth to energy releasing reactions that fueled growth in the first microbial cells. It is for teachers and college students with an interest in microbiology, geosciences, biochemistry, evolution, or all of the above. The scope of the book is a quantum departure from existing “origin of life” books in that it starts with basic chemistry and links energy-releasing geochemical processes to the reactions of microbial metabolism. The text reaches across disciplines, providing students of the geosciences an origins/biology interface and bringing a geochemistry/origins interface to students of microbiology and evolution. Beginning with physical chemistry and transitioning across metabolic networks into microbiology, the timeline documents chemical events and organizational states in hydrothermal vents – the only environments known that bridge the gap between spontaneous chemical reactions that we can still observe in nature today and the physiology of microbes that live from H2, CO2, ammonia, phosphorus, inorganic salts and water. Life is a chemical reaction. What it is and how it arose are two sides of the same coin.
Key Features
Provides clear connections between geochemical reactions and microbial metabolism
Focuses on chemical mechanisms and transition metals
Richly illustrated with color figures explaining reactions and processes
Covers the origin of the Earth, the origin of metabolism, the origin of protein synthesis and genetic information as well as the escape into the wild of the first free-living cells: Bacteria and Archaea
There are no comments on this title.