Sulphobes Explained
A sulphobe is a film composed of formaldehyde and thiocyanates alleged to have lifelike properties. The name is a portmanteau of sulphur microbe. Sulphobes were a subject in the researches of Alfonso L. Herrera, a biologist who studied the origin of life.[1] [2]
Further reading
- Book: Bedau, Mark A. . Protocells: Bridging Nonliving and Living Matter . etal . . 2009 . 978-0-262-28209-3 . 939059014. 4.
- Book: Cyril Ponnamperuma
. Chemical Evolution: The Structure and Model of the First Cell . Ponnamperuma . Cyril . Cyril Ponnamperuma . Chela-Flores . Julián . Julian Chela-Flores . 1995 . Kluwer Academic Publishers . 978-0-7923-3562-7 . 492364104. registration. 13–15. OL1279293M.
Notes and References
- 10.1126/science.96.2479.14 . A New Theory of the Origin and Nature of Life . 1942 . Herrera . A. L. . Science . 96 . 14 . 17838641 . 2479. 1942Sci....96...14H .
- 10.1007/BF00700417 . Alfonso L. Herrera: A Mexican pioneer in the study of chemical evolution . 1995 . Negrón-Mendoza . A. . Journal of Biological Physics . 20 . 1–4 . 11–15. 91627918 .