Bazsites.com Archaea
Directory Topics
On the Web
- Introduction to the Archaea - Covers their main groupings, chemical differences from other life forms, fossil record, and the structure of their cell walls.
- Archaea - Microbiological journal devoted to original research on the Archaea. Author guide, publication schedule, and text of older articles.
- ArchaeaWeb - Links to popular press and journal articles, research news, and other sources of information about Archaea and extremophiles. Includes user comments.
- Taxonomy Browser (Archaea) - Shows the relationships among the reconginzed groups, and samples yet to be named or classified.
- Wikispecies: Archaea - Taxonomy browser, with some links.
- Archaea - The International microbiological journal devoted to original research on the Archaea.
- Archaea - Introduction to this life form, written at three different levels of complexity for use by educators and students.
- Domain Archaea - Basic phylogeny, gene organization, and methods of DNA replication and transcription.
- The Archaea - General introduction, mentioning most known genera and species of Euryarchaeota and Crenarchaeota. Includes some technical details such as toxin sensitivities.
- Archaea - Short, simple introduction to these organisms.
Wikipedia Articles
- Archaea - The Archaea (), or archaebacteria, are a major group of microorganisms. Like bacteria, archaea are single-celled organisms that lack nuclei and are therefore prokaryotes, classified in kingdom Monera in the traditional five-kingdom taxonomy.
- List of Archaea genera - This article lists the genera of the Archaea.
- Halobacterium salinarum - Halobacterium is an extremely halophilic marine gram-negative obligate aerobic archaeon. Despite its name, this microorganisms is not a bacteria, but rather a member of the Domain Archaea.
- George E. Fox - Professor George Edward Fox (born 1945) is a researcher at The University of Houston. Co-discoverer of Archaea, the third domain of life and the concept of a progenote as a primordial entity, with Carl Woese in the early 70's.
- The ISME Journal - The ISME Journal: Multidisciplinary Journal of Microbial Ecology is the official publication of the International Society for Microbial Ecology (ISME). The journal seeks to promote diverse and integrated areas of microbial ecology spanning the breadth of microbial life, including bacteria, archaea, microbial eukaryotes, and viruses.