The Best American Science and Nature Writing 2014
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The Best American Science and Nature Writing 2014

Deborah Blum, Deborah Blum

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eBook - ePub

The Best American Science and Nature Writing 2014

Deborah Blum, Deborah Blum

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"A stimulating compendium" on topics from antibiotics to animals, featuring Rebecca Solnit, E.O. Wilson, Nicholas Carr, Elizabeth Kolbert, and many more ( Kirkus Reviews ). "A consistently strong series... Making connections between seemingly unrelated topics can help expand thinking, as seen in the effects of automated navigation on both airplane pilot error and Inuit hunting accidents that Nicholas Carr explores in 'The Great Forgetting.' Sarah Stewart Johnson makes a similar connection between the loss of a 1912 Antarctic expedition and the explosion of the space shuttle Challenger in 'O-Rings.'... Essays like Virginia Hughes's '23 and You' investigates the effects of availability of individual genetic information on human interactions, while pieces like Maryn McKenna's 'Imagining the Post-Antibiotics Future' and Kate Sheppard's 'Under Water' remind us of unpleasant futures which we have in large part created ourselves. But Barbara Kingsolver's 'Where it Begins, ' a lyrical musing on connectedness, or Wilson's optimistic, bug-loving 'The Rebirth of Gorongosa, ' reveal that among the strange, shocking, or depressing, there is still unadulterated joy to be found." — Publishers Weekly "Undeniably exquisite... meditations that reveal not only how science actually happens but also who or what propels its immutable humanity." —Maria Popova, Brain Pickings Contributors include: Katherine Bagley ‱ Nicholas Carr ‱ David Dobbs ‱ Pippa Goldschmidt ‱ Amy Harmon ‱ Robin Marantz Henig ‱ Virginia Hughes ‱ Ferris Jabr ‱ Sarah Stewart Johnson ‱ Barbara J.King ‱ Barbara Kingsolver ‱ Maggie Koerth-Baker ‱ Elizabeth Kolbert ‱ Joshua Lang ‱ Maryn McKenna ‱ Seth Mnookin ‱ Justin Nobel ‱ Fred Pearce ‱ Corey S.Powell ‱ Roy Scranton ‱ Kate Sheppard ‱ Bill Sherwonit ‱ Rebecca Solnit ‱ David Treuer ‱ E.O. Wilson ‱ Carl Zimmer

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ELIZABETH KOLBERT
The Lost World

FROM The New Yorker
I
On April 4, 1796—or, according to the French Revolutionary calendar in use at the time, 15 Germinal, Year IV—Jean-LĂ©opold-Nicholas-FrĂ©dĂ©ric Cuvier, known, after a brother who had died, simply as Georges, delivered his first public lecture at the National Institute of Science and Arts in Paris. Cuvier, who was twenty-six, had arrived in the city a year earlier, shortly after the end of the Reign of Terror. He had wide-set gray eyes, a prominent nose, and a temperament that a friend compared to the exterior of the earth—generally cool, but capable of violent tremors and eruptions. Cuvier had grown up in a small town on the Swiss border and had almost no connections in the capital. Nevertheless, he had managed to secure a prestigious research position there, thanks to the passing of the ancien rĂ©gime, on the one hand, and his own sublime self-regard, on the other. An older colleague later described him as popping up in the city “like a mushroom.”
Extinction may be the first scientific idea that children today have to grapple with. We give one-year-olds dinosaurs to play with, and two-year-olds understand, in a vague sort of way, at least, that these small plastic creatures represent very large animals that once existed in the flesh. If they’re quick learners, kids still in diapers can explain that there were once many kinds of dinosaurs and that they lived long ago. (My own sons, as toddlers, used to spend hours over a set of dinosaurs that could be arranged on a plastic mat depicting a forest from the Cretaceous. The scene featured a lava-spewing volcano, and when you pressed the mat in the right spot it emitted a delightfully terrifying roar.) All of which is to say that extinction strikes us as an extremely obvious idea. It isn’t.
All are but parts of one stupendous whole,
Whose body nature is, and God the soul.
Since Cuvier’s day, the National Museum of Natural History has grown into a sprawling institution with outposts all over France. Its main buildings, though, are still in Paris, on the site of the old royal gardens in the Fifth Arrondissement. Cuvier worked at the museum for most of his life and lived there, too, in a large stucco house that’s been converted into office space. Next door to the house, there’s a restaurant, and next to that a menagerie, where, on the day I visited, some wallabies were sunning themselves on the grass. Across the gardens, a large hall houses the museum’s paleontology collection.
With his lecture on “the species of elephants, both living and fossil,” Cuvier had succeeded in establishing extinction as a fact. But his most extravagant assertion—that there had existed a whole lost world, filled with lost species—remained just that. If there had indeed been such a world, then it ought to be possible to find traces of other extinct animals. So Cuvier set out to find them.
Cuvier’s proof of extinction—of “a world previous to ours”—was a sensational event, and news of it soon spread across the Atlantic. When a nearly complete giant skeleton was unearthed by...

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