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    <title>uwnews.org | RSS news feed: news releases by expert: John Baross | jbaross@u.washington.edu |  | University of Washington</title>
    <description>This RSS news feed from uwnews.org, the University of Washington Office of News and Information, includes articles about John Baross (jbaross@u.washington.edu).</description>
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    <copyright>(c)2010 University of Washington News and Information | http://uwnews.org | uwnews@u.washington.edu | 206-543-2580</copyright>
    <managingEditor>Bob Roseth | roseth@u.washington.edu</managingEditor>
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      <title>Microbe fixes nitrogen at a blistering 92 C, may offer clues to evolution of nitrogen fixation</title>
      <description>A heat-loving archaeon capable of fixing nitrogen at a surprisingly hot 92 degrees Celsius, or 198 Fahrenheit, may represent Earth's earliest lineages of organisms capable of nitrogen fixation, perhaps even preceding the kinds of bacteria today's plants and animals rely on to fix nitrogen.</description>
      <link>http://uwnews.org/article.asp?articleid=28838</link>
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      <author>Sandra Hines (shines@u.washington.edu) </author>
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      <pubDate>Thu, 14 Dec 2006 08:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
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      <title>Microbe understudies await their turn in the limelight</title>
      <description>On the marine microbial stage, there appears to be a vast, varied group of understudies only too ready to step in when "star" microbes falter. Work led by the University of Washington provides the first evidence that microorganisms can be rare for long periods before completely turning the tables to become dominant when ecosystems change.</description>
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      <author>Sandra Hines (shines@u.washington.edu) </author>
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      <pubDate>Mon, 11 Jan 2010 19:47:28 GMT</pubDate>
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