Random observations about salt (sodium chloride), how it's made and its 14,000 known uses written by Dick Hanneman, president of the Salt Institute, the foremost global association in the salt industry.
Tuesday, December 06, 2005
Scientists sequence genome of salt-resistant bacteria
For millenia, until the dawn of refrigeration a century ago, foods were salted for preservation because massive dosage of salt will kill bacteria. A blog December 3rd, reports that, using funding from the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) and National Science Foundation, researchers have now sequenced the genome of a bacterium from a Spanish solar saltworks that has adapted and exchanged genes with another organism to survive. USDA has an extensive research program to develop salt-resistent crops suitable for harsh desert horticulture like the U.S. Southwest and western Australia.
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