You have no idea where camels really come from | Latif Nasser

796,569 views ・ 2016-04-14

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So, this is a story
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about how we know what we know.
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It's a story about this woman,
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Natalia Rybczynski.
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She's a paleobiologist,
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which means she specializes in digging up really old dead stuff.
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(Audio) Natalia Rybczynski: Yeah, I had someone call me "Dr. Dead Things."
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Latif Nasser: And I think she's particularly interesting
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because of where she digs that stuff up,
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way above the Arctic Circle in the remote Canadian tundra.
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Now, one summer day in 2006,
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she was at a dig site called the Fyles Leaf Bed,
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which is less than 10 degrees latitude away from the magnetic north pole.
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(Audio) NR: Really, it's not going to sound very exciting,
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because it was a day of walking with your backpack and your GPS
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and notebook and just picking up anything that might be a fossil.
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LN: And at some point, she noticed something.
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(Audio) NR: Rusty, kind of rust-colored,
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about the size of the palm of my hand.
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It was just lying on the surface.
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LN: And at first she thought it was just a splinter of wood,
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because that's the sort of thing people had found
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at the Fyles Leaf Bed before -- prehistoric plant parts.
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But that night, back at camp ...
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(Audio) NR: ... I get out the hand lens,
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I'm looking a little bit more closely and realizing
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it doesn't quite look like this has tree rings.
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Maybe it's a preservation thing,
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but it looks really like ...
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bone.
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LN: Huh. So over the next four years,
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she went to that spot over and over,
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and eventually collected 30 fragments of that exact same bone,
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most of them really tiny.
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(Audio) NR: It's not a whole lot. It fits in a small Ziploc bag.
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LN: And she tried to piece them together like a jigsaw puzzle.
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But it was challenging.
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(Audio) NR: It's broken up into so many little tiny pieces,
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I'm trying to use sand and putty, and it's not looking good.
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So finally, we used a 3D surface scanner.
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LN: Ooh! NR: Yeah, right?
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(Laughter)
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LN: It turns out it was way easier to do it virtually.
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(Audio) NR: It's kind of magical when it all fits together.
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LN: How certain were you that you had it right,
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that you had put it together in the right way?
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Was there a potential that you'd put it together a different way
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and have, like, a parakeet or something?
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(Laughter)
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(Audio) NR: (Laughs) Um, no. No, we got this.
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LN: What she had, she discovered, was a tibia, a leg bone,
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and specifically, one that belonged to a cloven-hoofed mammal,
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so something like a cow or a sheep.
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But it couldn't have been either of those.
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It was just too big.
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(Audio) NR: The size of this thing, it was huge. It's a really big animal.
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LN: So what animal could it be?
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Having hit a wall, she showed one of the fragments
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to some colleagues of hers in Colorado,
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and they had an idea.
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(Audio) NR: We took a saw, and we nicked just the edge of it,
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and there was this really interesting smell that comes from it.
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LN: It smelled kind of like singed flesh.
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It was a smell that Natalia recognized
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from cutting up skulls in her gross anatomy lab:
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collagen.
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Collagen is what gives structure to our bones.
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And usually, after so many years,
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it breaks down.
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But in this case, the Arctic had acted like a natural freezer and preserved it.
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Then a year or two later, Natalia was at a conference in Bristol,
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and she saw that a colleague of hers named Mike Buckley
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was demoing this new process that he called "collagen fingerprinting."
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It turns out that different species have slightly different structures
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of collagen,
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so if you get a collagen profile of an unknown bone,
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you can compare it to those of known species,
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and, who knows, maybe you get a match.
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So she shipped him one of the fragments,
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FedEx.
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(Audio) NR: Yeah, you want to track it. It's kind of important.
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(Laughter)
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LN: And he processed it,
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and compared it to 37 known and modern-day mammal species.
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And he found a match.
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It turns out that the 3.5 million-year-old bone
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that Natalia had dug out of the High Arctic
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belonged to ...
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a camel.
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(Laughter)
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(Audio) NR: And I'm thinking, what? That's amazing -- if it's true.
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LN: So they tested a bunch of the fragments,
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and they got the same result for each one.
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However, based on the size of the bone that they found,
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it meant that this camel was 30 percent larger than modern-day camels.
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So this camel would have been about nine feet tall,
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weighed around a ton.
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(Audience reacts)
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Yeah.
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Natalia had found a Giant Arctic camel.
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(Laughter)
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Now, when you hear the word "camel,"
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what may come to mind is one of these,
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the Bactrian camel of East and Central Asia.
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But chances are the postcard image you have in your brain
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is one of these, the dromedary,
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quintessential desert creature --
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hangs out in sandy, hot places like the Middle East and the Sahara,
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has a big old hump on its back
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for storing water for those long desert treks,
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has big, broad feet to help it tromp over sand dunes.
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So how on earth would one of these guys end up in the High Arctic?
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Well, scientists have known for a long time, turns out,
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even before Natalia's discovery,
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that camels are actually originally American.
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(Music: The Star-Spangled Banner)
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(Laughter)
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They started here.
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For nearly 40 of the 45 million years that camels have been around,
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you could only find them in North America,
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around 20 different species, maybe more.
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(Audio) LN: If I put them all in a lineup, would they look different?
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NR: Yeah, you're going to have different body sizes.
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You'll have some with really long necks,
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so they're actually functionally like giraffes.
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LN: Some had snouts, like crocodiles.
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(Audio) NR: The really primitive, early ones would have been really small,
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almost like rabbits.
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LN: What? Rabbit-sized camels?
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(Audio) NR: The earliest ones.
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So those ones you probably would not recognize.
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LN: Oh my God, I want a pet rabbit-camel.
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(Audio) NR: I know, wouldn't that be great?
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(Laughter)
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LN: And then about three to seven million years ago,
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one branch of camels went down to South America,
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where they became llamas and alpacas,
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and another branch crossed over the Bering Land Bridge
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into Asia and Africa.
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And then around the end of the last ice age,
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North American camels went extinct.
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So, scientists knew all of that already,
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but it still doesn't fully explain how Natalia found one so far north.
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Like, this is, temperature-wise, the polar opposite of the Sahara.
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Now to be fair,
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three and a half million years ago,
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it was on average 22 degrees Celsius warmer than it is now.
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So it would have been boreal forest,
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so more like the Yukon or Siberia today.
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But still, like, they would have six-month-long winters
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where the ponds would freeze over.
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You'd have blizzards.
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You'd have 24 hours a day of straight darkness.
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Like, how ... How?
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How is it that one of these Saharan superstars
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could ever have survived those arctic conditions?
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(Laughter)
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Natalia and her colleagues think they have an answer.
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And it's kind of brilliant.
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What if the very features that we imagine make the camel so well-suited
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to places like the Sahara,
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actually evolved to help it get through the winter?
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What if those broad feet were meant to tromp not over sand,
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but over snow, like a pair of snowshoes?
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What if that hump -- which, huge news to me,
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does not contain water, it contains fat --
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(Laughter)
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was there to help the camel get through that six-month-long winter,
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when food was scarce?
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And then, only later, long after it crossed over the land bridge
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did it retrofit those winter features for a hot desert environment?
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Like, for instance, the hump may be helpful to camels in hotter climes
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because having all your fat in one place,
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like a, you know, fat backpack,
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means that you don't have to have that insulation
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all over the rest of your body.
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So it helps heat dissipate easier.
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It's this crazy idea,
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that what seems like proof of the camel's quintessential desert nature
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could actually be proof of its High Arctic past.
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Now, I'm not the first person to tell this story.
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Others have told it as a way to marvel at evolutionary biology
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or as a keyhole into the future of climate change.
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But I love it for a totally different reason.
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For me, it's a story about us,
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about how we see the world
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and about how that changes.
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So I was trained as a historian.
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And I've learned that, actually, a lot of scientists are historians, too.
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They make sense of the past.
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They tell the history of our universe, of our planet, of life on this planet.
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And as a historian,
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you start with an idea in your mind of how the story goes.
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(Audio) NR: We make up stories and we stick with it,
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like the camel in the desert, right?
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That's a great story! It's totally adapted for that.
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Clearly, it always lived there.
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LN: But at any moment, you could uncover some tiny bit of evidence.
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You could learn some tiny thing
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that forces you to reframe everything you thought you knew.
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Like, in this case, this one scientist finds this one shard
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of what she thought was wood,
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and because of that, science has a totally new and totally counterintuitive theory
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about why this absurd Dr. Seuss-looking creature
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looks the way it does.
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And for me, it completely upended the way I think of the camel.
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It went from being this ridiculously niche creature
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suited only to this one specific environment,
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to being this world traveler that just happens to be in the Sahara,
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and could end up virtually anywhere.
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(Applause)
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This is Azuri.
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Azuri, hi, how are you doing?
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OK, here, I've got one of these for you here.
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(Laughter)
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So Azuri is on a break from her regular gig
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at the Radio City Music Hall.
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(Laughter)
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That's not even a joke.
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Anyway --
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But really, Azuri is here as a living reminder
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that the story of our world is a dynamic one.
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It requires our willingness to readjust, to reimagine.
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(Laughter)
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Right, Azuri?
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And, really, that we're all just one shard of bone away
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from seeing the world anew.
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Thank you very much.
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(Applause)
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