Author: Aimee Cunningham / Source: Science News

Mayandi Sivaguru and Jessica Saw/Bruce Fouke Lab/Carl R.
Woese Institute for Genomic Biology/Univ. of Ill.It took a close look at crystal formation in Yellowstone’s hot springs to understand stones much closer to home. Growth and dissolution patterns found in rocks there mirror what’s going on with stones in our kidneys, says Bruce Fouke, a geobiologist at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, contradicting the medical dogma that kidney stones don’t dissolve.
Fouke, who usually travels to hot springs and coral reefs for his research on minerals and crystals, had never seen a stone that “doesn’t grow and dissolve,…
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