Bacteria have been discovered that turn ordinary metal into gold. This sounds great, except that if there is too much gold, it will become worthless?it’s valuable because of its rarity. For instance, Diamonds are actually much more common that we think, but they are kept artificially scarce?and thus expensive?by limited mining by a single South African company.

Robin Lloyd writes in LiveScience.com that Australian researcher Frank Reith has discovered a film of bacteria on gold that has been mined in that country. When he grew the bacteria in his lab and dissolved it in a liquid solution containing non-gold metals, the result was gold nuggets. This might be the secret behind seemingly magic legends about ancient alchemists being able to turn ordinary metal into gold.

Art credit: freeimages.co.uk

Only by carefully researching ancient history will we reach an understanding of what really happened?and how it affects us today.

There’s something else that affects each and every one of us, although we may not realize it. Whitley has written non-fiction about it?now he’s told everything he knows in his new novel The Grays. He?s going to send EVERY SUBSCRIBER a free signed book plate, so subscribe today. The Grays will be published on August 22nd. Be ready when your bookplate arrives: order your copy TODAY.

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