The Two Frontiers Project
Microbial exploration at Earth’s extremes Carbon | Coral | Crops | 501(c)(3)
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About | The Two Frontiers Project
About | The Two Frontiers Project
The Two Frontiers Project (2FP) is a 501(c)(3) non-profit research organization dedicated to advancing human and environmental health by expedition-based exploration of microbial diversity extreme environments, with an emphasis on humanity’s greatest frontiers: the oceans and space.
NYTimes | The Very Hungry Microbes That Could
NYTimes | The Very Hungry Microbes That Could
Donate | Support Scientific Discovery
Donate | Support Scientific Discovery
Handbook | Field Sampling and Processing Guide
Handbook | Field Sampling and Processing Guide
Two Frontiers Project - Open source research tools and protocols
Project ReefLink 🪸🧪
Project ReefLink 🪸🧪
ReefLink is where coral keepers become scientists. Through a simple kit, aquarists and aquariums partner with the Two Frontiers Project (2FP) to uncover coral microbiomes—the hidden networks that shape reef health and resilience.
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Studying the Methane-Consuming Microbes of Romania
Studying the Methane-Consuming Microbes of Romania
Searching for methane-eating microbes in the mud volcanoes and eternal flames of Romania.
Got Coral? Scientists Want a Piece
Got Coral? Scientists Want a Piece
Seed Health and the Two Frontiers Project want home aquarists to send in samples of their corals, to learn what conditions the vital organism can—and can't—survive in.
Household Slime May Harbor Useful Extremophiles
Household Slime May Harbor Useful Extremophiles
Citizen scientists set out on a microbial treasure hunt at home and in the wild, searching for microbes that could fuel scientific discovery.
Bacteria Could Help World Curb Climate Crisis
Bacteria Could Help World Curb Climate Crisis
Secret to Solving Climate Change Hiding in Your Toilet
Secret to Solving Climate Change Hiding in Your Toilet
Goo Under Fridge or AC Might Help Fight Climate Change
Goo Under Fridge or AC Might Help Fight Climate Change
If you have a drip tray under your fridge that’s filled with orange goo, you might have an organism living with you that science wants to know about. A researcher at Colorado State University is collecting samples from people’s homes that he thinks could hold solutions to climate change and pollution.
Hunting for Microbial Marvel Can Help Planet's Biggest Issues
Hunting for Microbial Marvel Can Help Planet's Biggest Issues
What if the solutions to some of Earth's biggest problems could be found in some of its smallest creatures? That bet has led a team of researchers to places both remote and — lately — rather familiar.
Could Goo & Gunk in Home Solve Climate Change?
Could Goo & Gunk in Home Solve Climate Change?
Climate change solutions might be lurking in the dark recesses of your home, according to microbiologist James Henriksen, and he’s encouraging everyone to get involved in the search for extremophiles, organisms that survive in extreme environments – including your water heater, air conditioner and dishwasher.
Studying Carbon-Eating Microbes @ Shikinejima (CARBON4)
Studying Carbon-Eating Microbes @ Shikinejima (CARBON4)
CitSci: Looking for Carbon-Capturing Microbes in Springs
CitSci: Looking for Carbon-Capturing Microbes in Springs
Atmos: Lessons for More Livable Future
Atmos: Lessons for More Livable Future
Meet Chonkus – Algae Trying to End Climate Crisis
Meet Chonkus – Algae Trying to End Climate Crisis
New Ally in Fight to Clean Up CO2 Emissions
New Ally in Fight to Clean Up CO2 Emissions
A newly discovered bacterium could help humans deal with climate change — if scientists can figure out how to crack open its DNA.
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