Tuesday, March 12, 2019
Deception Point Page 90
Face-to-face with him, Rachel felt like a teenager standing on the doorstep with a modern boyfriend. Thanks. No problem at either. Re every(prenominal)y. Something inside her sensed Tolland wanted to kiss her.after a beat, he turned shyly away. I k straightaway. You want to pack to shore. We should get to work.For now. Rachel smiled softly.For now, Tolland repeated, taking a seat at the computer.Rachel exhaled, standing sloshed behind now, savoring the privacy of the small lab. She watched Tolland navigate a serial publication of files. What ar we doing?Checking the selective informationbase for big ocean lice. I want to see if we nates find any prehistoric marine fossils that resemble what we saw in the NASA meteorite. He pulled up a search page with bold garner across the top PROJECT DIVERSITAS.Scrolling through the menus, Tolland explicateed, Diversitas is essentially a infinitely updated index of oceanic biodata. When a marine biologist discovers a new ocean species or f ossil, he basis besidest his horn and distribute his find by uploading data and photos to a central databank. Because theres so some(prenominal) new data discovered on a weekly basis, this is sincerely the only way to keep research up-to-date.Rachel watched Tolland navigating the menus. So youre accessing the Web now?No. Internet access is tricky at sea. We store all this data onboard on an enormous array of optical drives in the early(a) room. Every time were in port, we tie into Project Diversitas and update our databank with the newest finds. This way, we can access data at sea with by a Web connection, and the data is n ever more than a month or two reveal of date. Tolland chuckled as he began typing search keywords into the computer. Youve probably heard of the polemical music file-sharing program called Napster?Rachel nodded.Diversitas is considered the marine biologists version of Napster. We call it LOBSTER L 1ly pelagic Biologists Sharing Totally Eccentric Research .Rachel laughed. Even in this tense situation, Michael Tolland exuded a wry humor that eased her fears. She was beginning to realize shed had entirely too modest laughter in her life lately.Our database is enormous, Tolland said, completing the entry of his descriptive keywords. Over ten tera-bytes of descriptions and photos. Theres information in here nobody has ever seen-and nobody ever will. Ocean species are simply too numerous. He clicked the search button. Okay, lets see if anyone has ever seen an oceanic fossil similar to our little space bug.After a few seconds, the screen refreshed, revealing quartette listings of ossified animals. Tolland clicked on each listing one by one and examined the photos. None looked remotely like the fossils in the Milne meteorite.Tolland frowned. Lets try something else. He removed(p) the word fossil from his search string and hit search. Well search all living species. Maybe we can find a living descendent that has some of the physiological characteristics of the Milne fossil.The screen refreshed.Again Tolland frowned. The computer had returned hundreds of entries. He sit down a moment, stroking his now stubble-darkened chin. Okay, this is too much. Lets refine the search.Rachel watched as he accessed a drop-down menu marked habitat. The list of options looked endless tide pool, marsh, lagoon, reef, mid-oceanic ridge, randomness vents. Tolland scrolled down the list and chose an option that read Destructive Margins/Oceanic Trenches.Smart, Rachel realized. Tolland was qualifying his search only to species that lived near the environment where these chondrulelike features were hypothesized to form.The page refreshed. This time Tolland smiled. Great. besides three entries.Rachel squinted at the first break on the list. Limulus poly something.Tolland clicked the entry. A photo appeared the wolf looked like an oversized horseshoe crab without a tail.Nope, Tolland said, returning to the previous page.Rachel eyed the se cond item on the list. Shrimpus Uglius From Hellus. She was confused. Is that name for real?Tolland chuckled. No. Its a new species not yet classified. The laugh at who discovered it has a sense of humor. Hes suggesting Shrimpus Uglius as the official taxonomical classification. Tolland clicked point-blank the photo, revealing an exceptionally ugly shrimplike creature with whiskers and fluorescent tapdance antennae.Aptly named, Tolland said. precisely not our space bug. He returned to the index. The final fling is He clicked on the third entry, and the page came up.Bathynomous giganteus Tolland read aloud as the text appeared. The photograph loaded. A full-color close-up.Rachel jumped. My God The creature staring keister at her gave her chills.Tolland drew a low breath. Oh boy. This guy looks kind of familiar.Rachel nodded, speechless. Bathynomous giganteus. The creature resembled a giant swimming louse. It looked very similar to the fossil species in the NASA endocarp.There are some subtle differences, Tolland said, scrolling down to some anatomic diagrams and sketches. But its damn close. Especially considering it has had one hundred ninety million years to evolve. completion is right, Rachel thought. Too close.Tolland read the description on the screen Thought to be one of the oldest species in the ocean, the rare and recently classified species Bathynomous giganteus is a deepwater scavenging isopod resembling a large pill bug. Up to two feet in length, this species exhibits a chitinous exoskeleton segmented into head, thorax, abdomen. It possesses paired appendages, antennae, and compound eyes like those of land-dwelling insects. This bottom-dwelling forager has no cognize predators and lives in barren pelagic environments previously thought to be uninhabitable. Tolland glanced up. Which could explain the lack of other fossils in the sampleRachel stared at the creature on-screen, ablaze and yet uncertain she completely understood what all of th is meant.Imagine, Tolland said excitedly, that 190 million years ago, a brood of these Bathynomous creatures got buried in a deep ocean mud slide. As the mud turns into rock, the bugs get fossilized in stone. Simultaneously, the ocean floor, which is continuously moving like a impenetrable conveyer belt toward the oceanic trenches, carries the fossils into a high-pressure zone where the rock forms chondrules Tolland was talking faster now. And if part of the fossilized, chondrulized crust broke off and end up on the trenchs accretionary wedge, which is not at all uncommon, it would be in a perfect position to be discoveredBut if NASA, Rachel stammered. I mean, if this is all a lie, NASA must have known that sooner or later person would find out this fossil resembles a sea creature, right? I mean we just found outTolland began printing the Bathynomous photos on a laser printer. I dont know. Even if someone stepped forward and pointed out the similarities between the fossils and a l iving sea louse, their physiologies are not identical. It almost proves NASAs case more strongly.Rachel suddenly understood. Panspermia. Life on earth was seeded from space.Exactly. Similarities between space organisms and earth organisms make pure scientific sense. This sea louse actually strengthens NASAs case.Except if the meteorites authenticity is in question.Tolland nodded. Once the meteorite comes into question, then everything collapses. Our sea louse turns from NASA friend to NASA linchpin.
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