> ==========
> bionet/microbiology #2406, from kafkwtz at ANDROMEDA.RUTGERS.EDU, 1003
chars, 21 Mar 1996 05:35:48 -0
> ----------
> Article: 3357 of bionet.microbiology
> Path:
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!swrinde!ihnp4.ucsd.edu!biosci!ANDROMEDA.RUTGERS.EDU!kafkwtz
> From: kafkwtz at ANDROMEDA.RUTGERS.EDU (David Kafkewitz)
> Newsgroups: bionet.microbiology
> Subject: Re: Carbon eaters
> Date: 21 Mar 1996 05:35:48 -0800
> Organization: BIOSCI International Newsgroups for Molecular Biology
> Lines: 16
> Sender: daemon at net.bio.net> Distribution: world
> Message-ID: <199603211333.IAA20670 at andromeda.rutgers.edu>
> NNTP-Posting-Host: net.bio.net
>> >
> >From: nlandau at eden.rutgers.edu (Nicholas Landau)
> >Subject: Re: Carbon eaters
> >Date: 20 Mar 1996 17:44:44 -0500
> >
> >
> >A short response to a long posting: I believe that diamond and coal
> >are the two forms of naturally occurring carbon which no organism
> >has ever been seen to degrade.
> >
> Yes, but why ?
> David Kafkewitz, Department of Biological Sciences,
> Rutgers University, Newark N.J. 07102, U.S.A.
> 201 648 5865; fax: 201 648 1007
>kafkwtz at andromeda.rutgers.edu>Solubility ??
Peter Harris, Reading, UK.