Count your bones!

My last Seed column is online. Print media feels a little weird — it's like I wrote that one long ago, the one I finished earlier in July is going to print right now (and will be out in mid-August), and I'm already working on the column after that. It's like looking at old history for me.

It's also an old story for you subscribers. It's just those who haven't subscribed yet who are months behind the times. So when are you people going to join the rest of us…in the future?

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For now, at least. My natural inclinations about this whole mess are probably closest in nature to either Chad Orzel's or Jason Rosenhouse's, so reading them will probably give you a pretty close idea of where I stand. Bora, not surprisingly, has collected a lot of the reaction. I also really like…
Life has been proceeding more or less apace, and it feels like a long time since I've sat down and contemplated anything, much less my Anyway Project goals. At the same time, all this business is a series of steps on the way to actually many of the things done. I hope that's true of all of you!…
During my summer blogging break, I thought I'd repost of few of my "greatest hits" from my old blog, just so you all wouldn't miss me so much. This one is from November 7, 2007. It generated quite a few interesting comments, so you might want to check back at the original post. My feeling on a…
On January 23rd 2007, Tet Zoo ver 2 - the ScienceBlogs version of Tetrapod Zoology - graced the intertoobz for the first time. There was rapturous applause, swooning, the delight of millions. Looking back at it now, that very first ver 2 post is rather odd. It's on the blood-feeding behaviour of…

Thank you! Giraffe necks are among the better refutations of creationism and intelligent design, and you've plumbed depths of developmental biology I had no clue about. Great stuff.

The seven bones of the giraffe have to be so heavy that the poor giraffe can't get a drink easily, and older individuals put their lives on the line every time they splay their hooves out (they can't bend down to the water otherwise) and lower their necks. If anything goes wrong, if they can't get back up, they suffer from panic heart attacks, or they drown. Predators of giraffes know this, but creationists don't.

Care to probe the vagus nerve of the giraffe in an essay sometime?

Call Parade magazine. They need you on their masthead. (If you haven't seen my comments in the Parade magazine thread, go see 'em now.)

It's nice to see the concept of constraint (in the evolutionary sense)teased apart to show what developmental and other factors might underly a concept that would be so easy for us to treat as a "black box".

One correction to the article, though: while typical sauropods had 12 or so cervicals, diplodocids had 15 or 16, and the long-necked Chinese genera Omeisaurus, Mamenchisaurus, and Euhelopus had 17.

Off-topic: The banner ad at the moment is from monster.com, promising "free career horoscopes." Umm...dudes?

So when are you people going to join the rest of us...in the future?

Dude, I've been there and back. I just finished reading an interview of Alister McGrath in the August 5-11 National Catholic Register. He still says atheism is in decline. I also read an editorial, Answering Atheism in the same August 5-11 NCR. They say atheism is in resurgence. Maybe it's a resurgent decline.

Will somebody make some t-shirts for sale that say "This is what an atheist looks like?" I think that would be a lot better than this A logo thing.

We're putting the finishing touches on the Dec/Jan issue of the magazine for which I work right now. Very strange to have sugarplums dancing in one's head when it's eighty-plus outside and the kids are begging to go to the swimming pool.

What Kristjan said. Goo.
:)

This has nothing to do with anything. Its about music. I recently heard a band and I couldn't help but think of PZ and the crew here. The band is The Phenomenauts and they remind me of if They Might Be Giants tried to cover Devo and the Stray Cats at the same time, with a slight punk edge.

PZ recently had a post for TMBG are sorta similar but the Phenomenauts tag line is "Science and Honor." I think some of you guys will like them, those who don't oh well its just music.

Have a good one everybody!

"Before an organism as a whole can compete in the world outside, its cells and tissues and organs have to learn to dance together, to be a coordinated unit ..." - PZ

poetry in motion ...

Sublime imagery.

So we are inflexible stiff-necked bastards among the vertebrates? Good to know, must stay in character.

... its cells and tissues and organs have to learn to dance together, ...

Ooh, are you talking to me? "I dance, therefore I am."

By Torbjörn Larsson, OM (not verified) on 02 Aug 2007 #permalink

How far back in ancestral species did the 7 vertebras get set into the mammal's body plan? Did the lineage of the current outliers (sloths/manatees) branch out before the body plan was fixed or did they evolve to a different number despite the problems associated with varying the plan?

By Alan Wagner (not verified) on 03 Aug 2007 #permalink

Wonderful article, PZ. The relationship between the number of vertebrae and mortality in mammals sounds very fascinating. I really like the way you can make the science understandable for the lay person like myself.

So we are inflexible stiff-necked bastards among the vertebrates? Good to know, must stay in character.

... its cells and tissues and organs have to learn to dance together, ...

Ooh, are you talking to me? "I dance, therefore I am."

By Torbjörn Larsson, OM (not verified) on 02 Aug 2007 #permalink