«People have trouble understanding that we're embedded in
an invisible microbial world» and that we are colonized by those microbes, says Olsiewski, whose program has given academic researchers more than $ 40 million in grants.
Not exact matches
And so the
microbial world was delegated to an
invisible world in the 18th century — as natural philosophers turned to questions about the evolution of plants and animals, and the geologic structures that contained fossil remains of extinct organisms.
«The
microbial world is one of the last frontiers of exploration on our planet, and we're using microscopes together with genomics to learn as much as possible about this
invisible life.»