Chasing Bugs
Remember the first time you ever saw an ant hill? That parade of black insects pouring in and out of a small sand mound...most of us stopped, looked and then moved on to other parts of the playground. E. O. Wilson is the kid who never took his eyes off the mound.
He grew up to revolutionize the fields of entomology, sociobiology and conservationist thought. E. O. (E is for Edward, O is for Osborne) got a nod from Time Magazine on their list of the 25 Most Influential People in America and picked up a few Pulitzers along the way. But before all that he was just an eight-year-old boy in the South whose nickname was 'Bugs.'
Ed and Robert Krulwich spoke a few years ago at the 92nd Street Y in Manhattan about Ed's early insect-philia and how it blossomed. Ed tells Robert about the time he figured out how to make hundreds of ants trace his name and the time he convinced an ant colony one of their ants was dead when it was anything but.
If you like this conversation, stay tuned for Season 5. We are working on a whole show devoted to people falling in (and out of) love with science. Can't wait? Bugs crawling on your skin now? Re-visit Ed and other ant enthusiasts in our Emergence episode.
Brazilian man has 10 operations on his eyes so he can look Asian
A man obsessed with Korean culture has gone to extraordinary lengths to look Asian after having 10 plastic surgery operations to change his appearance.
Xiahn, 25, who was originally known as Max, became fixated on Korean culture following a year of study in the country.
Xiahn, who goes by the pseudonym Oriental Gaucho online, watched hours of Korean soap operas and listened to K-Pop constantly – and in time became overcome with the desire to have plastic surgery so that he would look like a native Korean.
‘As you know, there are thousands of Asian eye styles,’ Xiahn told Metro.co.uk. ‘I had one major surgery on my eyes and then small procedures to reach the correct appearance.’
Now Xiahn has plans to move to South Korea as soon as he has he can.
Reports of his transformation have preceded him, and reactions have been mixed. Some like it and some don’t, he says, just like ‘any other thing in this world.’
Despite the drastic transformation though, Xiahn still feels Brazilian, thanks to the country’s diversity: ‘There are many mixed Brazilian people. For me a Korean person looks Brazilian as much as a German person or any other person that has born here.’
‘So even though I’ve changed the shape of my eyes, I am still Brazilian.’
1.8-Million-Year-Old Skull Debunks Idea that Multiple Ancient Human Species Co-Existed on Earth
In a completely lucky and unexpected discovery, scientists have found a complete skull from a human ancestor believed to be 1.8 million years old, according to a press release.
Known as Skull 5, the skull is entirely intact and has a long face, large teeth and a small brain case. Its characteristics and condition make it different from other Homo genuses (habilis, rudolfensis, erectus, etc.) and also suggests those different human species did not roam the Earth at the same time nearly two million years ago.
The skull was found at a site in Dmanisi, Georgia, but the area is not fully excavated and already it has provided researchers with a rare study opportunity. Skull 5 was found along with four other human fossils, a variety of animal remains and some stone tools, all believed to be from the same timeframe.
Skull 5 has the features of an early human, but also changes a widely accepted perspective. Photo courtesy of Georgian National Museum.
David Lordkipanidze, of the Georgian National Museum in Tbilisi, Georgia, and colleagues in Switzerland, Israel and the United States, published their findings Friday in the journal Science.
"Had the braincase and the face of Skull 5 been found as separate fossils at different sites in Africa, they might have been attributed to different species," said co-author Christoph Zollikofer, of the Anthropological Institute and Museum in Zurich, Switzerland.
Skull 5's various physical traits can be linked to several Homo species, including some whose fossils found in Africa to date back 2.4 millions years ago and those found in Asia and Europe 1.2 to 1.8 millions years ago.
"[The Dmanisi finds] look quite different from one another, so it's tempting to publish them as different species," said Zollikofer. "Yet we know that these individuals came from the same location and the same geological time, so they could, in principle, represent a single population of a single species."
The traits of the Dmanisi finds support what has already been accepted in human evolutionary studies. The small brain case, the large teeth, but what is special about Skull 5 is that it changes the perspective of a long-accepted theory about early humans.
"Furthermore, since we see a similar pattern and range of variation in the African fossil record... it is sensible to assume that there was a single Homo species at that time in Africa," Zollikofer said. "And since the Dmanisi hominids are so similar to the African ones, we further assume that they both represent the same species."