The July 14
th edition of the
San Francisco
Chronicle featured an article in the Science section devoted to
bioremediation research funded by the Office of Science
NABIR program. "Mining
bacteria's appetite for toxic waste—Researchers try to clean nuclear
sites with microbes," was authored by well-known science writer,
David Perlman. The article noted that scientists are exploiting the "unusual
appetites" of some microbes as a way to clean up nuclear sites.
Dr. Craig Criddle, an environmental engineer at Stanford University,
is working with microorganisms that can convert soluble uranium into
an insoluble form. Criddle's work includes research at the NABIR Field
Research Center at the Oak Ridge Reservation. In collaboration with ORNL
scientists, he is identifying and controlling environmental factors that
might inhibit or enhance the process of uranium precipitation. Criddle
hopes that "after bacteria consume radioactive waste, the uranium
can be separated from water like sand, and gathered like a common mineral." The
article also describes NABIR funded research by Dr. Derek Lovley of the
University of Massachusetts at Amherst. Lovley is currently performing
a field experiment at a Uranium Mill Tailing Remedial Action (UMTRA)
site in Rifle, CO. The goal of the experiment is to enhance the growth
of naturally-occurring microbes called
Geobacter to bioremediate
uranium-polluted ground water at the site. The article noted that genomes
of several species of
Geobacter have been sequenced by The Institute
for Genomic Research and the DOE Joint Genome Institute. The genome sequencing
was funded by the DOE Microbial Genome and Genomes to Life Programs.
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8/6/03