Caption: PRX default Piece image
PRX default Piece image 

Dunfield's Inferno

Series: August 2008 - Isla Earth Radio Series
From: Pat Maxwell
Length: 00:01:30

University of Calgary biology professor, Peter Dunfield, has been to hell and back looking for ways to keep methane gas out of the atmosphere. Read the full description.

Default-piece-image-0 University of Calgary biology professor, Peter Dunfield, has been to hell and back looking for ways to keep methane gas out of the atmosphere. And what he and his colleagues found in a New Zealand geothermal field called "Hell's Gate" might just do the trick. It's a type of methane-eating bacteria that lives in a boiling, highly acidic, water environment that's deadly to almost everything else on earth...

To hear the full audio, sign up for a free PRX account or log in.

Also in the August 2008 - Isla Earth Radio Series series

Caption: PRX default Piece image

Defining Organic Milk (00:01:30)
From: Pat Maxwell

What do you envision when you think of an organic dairy farm? Cows out grazing in a pasture? Or standing on the concrete floor of a feedlot?
Caption: PRX default Piece image

Be Invasive Savvy (00:01:30)
From: Pat Maxwell

So, you want to get out and freshen up your garden a tad. Great! But, before you begin planting willy nilly, take a moment and consider if what you're planting is native, or ...
Caption: PRX default Piece image

Sunshine Van Powers Up (00:01:30)
From: Pat Maxwell

Now here's a ride Little Miss Sunshine and her eccentric family would have appreciated...
Caption: PRX default Piece image

Shredded Plastics Return to Life (00:01:30)
From: Pat Maxwell

A German company has developed a way to get more mileage out of junked cars. Of course they have to shred them to pieces first.
Caption: PRX default Piece image

Saguaros' Nursery (00:01:30)
From: Pat Maxwell

While cacti can really stick it to us, the plight of the giant saguaro is nothing to poke fun at.
Caption: PRX default Piece image

Sucking Up Invasive Algae (00:01:30)
From: Pat Maxwell

Okay, so you're out in the clear waters of Hawaii and notice that algae are smothering the beautiful coral reefs just below the surface. What's going on?
Caption: PRX default Piece image

Digging Up Mud for Wetlands (00:01:30)
From: Pat Maxwell

What do you do when the land you love is 'slip sliding away'? Luckily for folks in Louisiana, legislators and scientists are looking at several creative ways to keep the ...
Caption: PRX default Piece image

Dead Zones: Courtesy of Fertilizers (00:01:30)
From: Pat Maxwell

This isn't how fertilizers are supposed to work. You'd think that more nutrients in water would be good for aquatic life.
Caption: PRX default Piece image

Trees Do Not a Forest Make (00:01:30)
From: Pat Maxwell

Midwestern settlers of yesterday would feel unsettled by what they'd see there today. They wouldn't recognize the forests for the trees.
Caption: PRX default Piece image

Heirloom Gardens (00:01:30)
From: Pat Maxwell

You probably won't find Jimmy Nardello's Sweet Italian frying peppers or Amish Deer Tongue lettuce at your local supermarket. But, a growing community of gardeners is ...

Piece Description

University of Calgary biology professor, Peter Dunfield, has been to hell and back looking for ways to keep methane gas out of the atmosphere. And what he and his colleagues found in a New Zealand geothermal field called "Hell's Gate" might just do the trick. It's a type of methane-eating bacteria that lives in a boiling, highly acidic, water environment that's deadly to almost everything else on earth...