AI and the Genome and Earth's Past Temperature | Fazale "Fuz" Rana and Hugh Ross
Description
In this episode, biochemist Fuz Rana describes recent insight from two investigators who make the case that genomes are generative AI systems. The architecture and operation of biochemical information is far more sophisticated and complex than previously recognized and points to purposeful design.
Two new studies on Earth’s past climate have provided important data for predicting Earth’s future climate, as well as exoplanet habitability. Oxygen-18 measurements from shale, iron oxide, carbonates, and chert show that Earth’s climate was warm from 2.0–0.5 billion years ago. Then a drop in global mean surface temperature (GMST) occurred 500 million years ago to a decline in atmospheric carbon dioxide. An integration of geological data with climate model simulations shows that GMSTs varied from 11–36°C over the past 485 million years, a much larger range than previous reconstructions. Temperature changes were especially dramatic at high latitudes. During the Phanerozoic, Earth spent more time in warm climate states than cold ones and atmospheric CO2 was the dominant control on climate. Throughout the past 2 billion years, atmospheric CO2 played the most important role in compensating for increasing solar luminosity.
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LINKS & RESOURCES -
Kevin J. Mitchell and Nick Cheney, “The Genomic Code: The Genome Instantiates a Generative Model of the Organism,” arxiv.org/abs/2407.15908
Benjamin J. W. Mills, “Hot and Cold Earth Through Time,” science.org/doi/10.1126/scienc...
Emily J. Judd et al., “A 485-Million-Year History of Earth’s Surface Temperature,” science.org/doi/10.1126/scienc...
Terry Isson and Sofia Rauzi, “Oxygen Isotope Ensemble Reveals Earth’s Seawater, Temperature, and Carbon Cycle History,” science.org/doi/10.1126/scienc...
PLAYLIST – Stars, Cells, and God
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HOST: Fazale "Fuz" Rana
GUEST: Hugh Ross
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