The most groundbreaking scientist you've never heard of - Addison Anderson

3,015,015 views ・ 2013-10-01

TED-Ed


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Nicolas Steno is rarely heard of
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outside Intro to Geology,
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but anyone hoping to understand life on Earth
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should see how Steno expanded and connected
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those very concepts:
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Earth, life, and understanding.
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Born Niels Stensen in 1638 Denmark,
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son of a goldsmith,
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he was a sickly kid
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whose school chums died of plague.
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He survived to cut up corpses
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as an anatomist,
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studying organs shared across species.
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He found a duct in animal skulls
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that sends saliva to the mouth.
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He refuted Descartes' idea
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that only humans had a pineal gland,
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proving it wasn't the seat of the soul,
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arguably, the debut of neuroscience.
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Most remarkable for the time was his method.
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Steno never let ancient texts,
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Aristotelian metaphysics,
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or Cartesian deductions
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overrule empirical, experimental evidence.
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His vision, uncluttered by speculation or rationalization,
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went deep.
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Steno had seen how gallstones
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form in wet organs by accretion.
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They obeyed molding principles
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he knew from the goldsmith trade,
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rules useful across disciplines
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for understanding solids
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by their structural relationships.
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Later, the Grand Duke of Tuscany
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had him dissect a shark.
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Its teeth resembled tongue stones,
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odd rocks seen inside other rocks
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in Malta and the mountains near Florence.
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Pliny the Elder, old Roman naturalist,
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said these fell from the sky.
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In the Dark Ages,
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folks said they were snake tongues,
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petrified by Saint Paul.
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Steno saw that tongue stones were shark teeth
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and vice versa,
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with the same signs of structural growth.
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Figuring similar things are made in similar ways,
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he argued the ancient teeth
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came from ancient sharks
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in waters that formed rock around the teeth
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and became mountains.
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Rock layers were once layers of watery sediment,
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which would lay out horizontally,
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one atop another,
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oldest up to newest.
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If layers were deformed,
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tilted,
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cut by a fault or a canyon,
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that change came after the layer formed.
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Sounds simple today;
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back then, revolutionary.
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He'd invented stratigraphy
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and laid geology's ground work.
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By finding one origin for shark teeth from two eras
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by stating natural laws ruling the present
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also ruled the past,
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Steno planted seeds for uniformitarianism,
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the idea that the past was shaped by processes
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observable today.
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In the 18th and 19th centuries,
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English uniformitarian geologists,
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James Hutton and Charles Lyell,
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studied current, very slow rates
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of erosion and sedimentation
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and realized the Earth had to be way older
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than the biblical guestimate, 6000 years.
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Out of their work came the rock cycle,
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which combined with plate tectonics
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in the mid-twentieth century
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to give us the great molten-crusting, quaking,
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all-encircling theory of the Earth,
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from a gallstone to a 4.5 billion-year-old planet.
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Now think bigger,
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take it to biology.
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Say you see shark teeth in one layer
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and a fossil of an organism
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you've never seen under that.
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The deeper fossil's older, yes?
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You now have evidence
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of the origin and extinction of species over time.
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Get uniformitarian.
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Maybe a process still active today
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caused changes not just in rocks but in life.
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It might also explain similarities and differences
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between species
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found by anatomists like Steno.
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It's a lot to ponder,
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but Charles Darwin had the time
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on a long trip to the Galapagos,
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reading a copy of his friend Charles Lyell's
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"Principles of Geology,"
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which Steno sort of founded.
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Sometimes giants stand on the shoulders
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of curious little people.
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Nicolas Steno helped evolve evolution,
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broke ground for geology,
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and showed how unbiased, empirical observation
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can cut across intellectual borders
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to deepen our perspective.
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His finest accomplishment, though,
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may be his maxim,
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casting the search for truth
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beyond our senses and our current understanding
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as the pursuit of the beauty
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of the as yet unknown.
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Beautiful is what we see,
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more beautiful is what we know,
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most beautiful, by far, is what we don't.
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