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Postgate's accounts of the weird and wonderful ways of microbes are stories both of sophisticated science and of the extremes in the biologic world. In contrast to plants and animals, single-cell organisms exhibit a wide range of biologic activities and occupy diverse ecologic niches, from deep-sea hydrothermal vents at 112 °C to salt pans at 5-M sodium chloride to the intestines of 11,000-year-old mastodon remains. This book has two aims: to describe "all the processes of which living cells are capable" and, along the way, to provide the nonscientist reader with "the cultural delight in understanding science."
The approach taken
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