A new kingdom

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Methanogen
"Eubacteria and urkaryotes correspond approximately to the conventional categories "prokaryote" and "eukaryote"... However, they do not constitute a dichotomy; they do not collectively exhaust the class of living systems.There exists a third kingdom..."

Since the days of Aristotle, naturalists have toiled to describe and group the organisms that inhabit this earth. Work throughout the ages from Theophrastus, Pliny the Elder, Caselpino, Linnaeus, and many more demonstrate a human desire to classify the world around us. This desire continues today; however, the advent of molecular biology has permitted a more complex analysis of taxonomic grouping. In 1977, Carl Woese and George Fox proposed a reorganization of the dichotomic phylogenetic tree. By comparing the ribosomal RNA of numerous organisms, they discovered a group that was more similar to itself than to eubacteria or eukaryotes. They named the group archaebacteria. Using this relatively simple method of comparison Woese and Fox revolutionized our understanding of the evolution of life. 
An article by the well known evolutionary biologist Ernst Mayr arguing that archaebacteria should not be separated from other prokaryotes

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