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The Loom

A blog about life, past and future

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Zimmer133.jpg Carl Zimmer is a science writer. PLEASE VISIT THE LOOM AT ITS NEW HOME.

Books by Carl Zimmer

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"Essential reading"--Publisher's Weekly
Microcosm: E. coli and the New Science of Life



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Charles Darwin's The Descent of Man: The Concise Edition



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"As fine a book as one will find on the subject."-- Scientific American

Revised with a new introduction





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"Superb...a non-stop delight."-- New Scientist





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"Fascinating...thrilling... Zimmer has produced a top-notch work of popular science." --LA Times





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"A fascinating story, which Zimmer unfolds as a tale of high-stakes scientific sleuthing...thanks to marvelous lucid writing." --Booklist





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Why the Loom?

"...among the joyous, heartless, ever-juvenile eternities, Pip saw the multitudinous, God-omnipresent, coral insects, that out of the firmament of waters, heaved the colossal orbs. He saw God's foot upon the treadle of the loom, and spoke it; and therefore his shipmates called him mad."
--Moby Dick

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« Why Tainted Spinach And Antibiotics Are a Bad Match | Main | Science and Religion Streamed to Your Computer »

Star-Nosed Genius

Category: Brains
Posted on: September 19, 2006 9:40 AM, by Carl Zimmer

mole.gifCongratulations to the new crop of Macarthur genius grant winners, including Ken Catania, a neuroscientist at Vanderbilt University whose muse is the star-nosed mole. It turns out that a single strange animal can reveal a lot about how nervous systems develop and evolve. For more on Catania's work, see my blog post from last year and my article on some of Catania's recent work for the New York Times.

Comments

#1

Hey, I saw that mole in Ancestor's Tale when browsing for pictures with my daughter. This is pretty cool. Unfortunately I'm still few hundred pages (translates to a month or two) away from reading it's tale.

Posted by: Markus | September 20, 2006 8:37 PM

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