Sideritic “coprolites” from the late Miocene of southwest Washington, the Upper Cretaceous of Saskatchewan and Madagascar, and the Permian of China have often been claimed to be pseudofossils. They are here interpreted as intestinal casts (cololites) prefossilized by bacterial activity and later transformed into siderite with no traces of original food particles left. All occurrences are found within fluvial overbank deposits that carry no other vertebrate remains. Their absence could be due to aquifer roll-fronts that destroyed phosphatic bones and teeth but favored siderite precipitation.
The capacity of absorbent beads in BacT/ALERT® FA Plus and BACTEC® Aerobic/F Plus blood culture bottles to bind and neutralize antibiotics was compared. Binding was established using reverse-phase HPLC, and inactivation was based on the recovery of susceptible test stains from simulated blood cultures. The FA Plus medium demonstrated more rapid and better overall binding kinetics for each drug tested, resulting in significantly better overall recovery rates. Differences in time to detection favored the FA Plus medium for three drug/organism combinations and Aerobic/F Plus for two.
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