X-Message-Number: 9353 Date: Thu, 26 Mar 1998 03:41:10 -0800 From: Paul Wakfer <> Subject: Re: CryoNet #9350 [reviving the frozen] References: <> I am certainly not the most "knowledgeable suspension enthusiast" on this list, but since Damien named me and sent me a copy, I have already written the following reply to him (for posting to the Extropian/Transhumanist lists if he wished) before I saw his post again on Cryonet. -- Paul -- Damien Broderick wrote: > A fascinating radio broadcast in Australia last night (Tues March 24) with > James Lovelock, inventor of the Gaia hypothesis. He was interviewed by a > very intelligent autodidact named Phillip Adams. I missed half the > program, but was astounded to hear Lovelock's claim that after his > unpatented invention (in the '50s? ' 40s?) of the microwave oven - or at > least of using microwaves to thaw frozen stuff - certain researchers in the > '50s successfully revived small frozen mammals by that method. > How pristine the animals' neurology was and how long they lasted after > revival wasn't made clear, but Lovelock was explicit about their chilly > temporary state - frozen hamsters, he said, were quite solid; you could > knock them against the lab bench. After thawing, they'd run around. The people at Biotime do this regularly. Don't forget the hamsters are "designed" to hibernate and go to very low temperatures in the winter. Yes, they can actually withstand a percentage of their brain water turned to ice (I forget how much). In addition, any mammal when cooled to near the ice point becomes stiff as a board and might appear to be quite solid. This is because the body's structural elements are mostly lipid and get very vicous/solid at that temperature. The dogs that 21CM does deep hypothermia experiments on (5+ hours at 2-3'C) feel like that. And yes, you could probably knock them against a lab bench without much damage to them (merely a small surface bruise when they were rewarmed) because the flesh is neither brittle nor very crushable. However, unfortunately, this and frozen frogs, fish, etc. are very little help to our needs in cryonics. The main reason for this is that chemistry, metabolism and biology are still proceeding and degradation is still taking place. For example, if you took any of the species which freeze and kept it in that state for even twice as long as the longest that it normally is in that state, the vast majority would not survive. Certainly, if you went out to 10 times, *none* would survive. In fact, the only animals which can stand very long periods of "suspended animation" are very small species which can completely desiccate (brine shrimp, tardigrades, etc). > I have a lot of respect for Lovelock's integrity and ingenuity. Yet this > claim appears to surpass anything that current cryonics specialists seem > able to replicate. That's only because we believe that this approach is a waste of our scarce resources. If we had enough money for suspended animation research, we would certainly be looking into the possibility of using or modifying animal anti-ice compounds. -- Paul -- Voice/Fax: 909-481-9620 Page: 800-805-2870 Institute for Neural Cryobiology - http://neurocryo.org (not quite yet) Perfected cryopreservation of Central Nervous System tissue for neuroscience research and medical repair of brain diseases Rate This Message: http://www.cryonet.org/cgi-bin/rate.cgi?msg=9353