
The Sahara desert is the largest hot desert in the world. Spanning some 3.5 million square miles (9 million square kilometers), this desert is almost as large as the United States and is expanding south at a rate of about 30 miles (48 kilometers) per year. To help slow or even stop this expansion, scientists have proposed using a species of our microbial nemesis that turns ordinary sand into sandstone to construct a huge containing wall in the desert.
While sounding more like a Harry Potter spell than a microbe, bacillus pasteurii has quite a knack for making its environment more alkaline. This causes the calcium and the carbonate in the sand to bond together to become the aptly named calcium carbonate, which acts as a kind of concrete for the sand.
FOR THE DETAILS: http://www.environmentalgraffiti.com/featured/bacteria-sahara-desertification/11121
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