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Renowned evolutionary biologist Neil Shubin joins me for an epic journey to Earth's most extreme polar frontiers. The author of the new book 'Ends of the Earth, explains why scientists are willing to brave bone-chilling environments where flesh freezes in seconds. Shubin shares with me stories of daring historical expeditions, cutting-edge climate research, and how these frozen landscapes hold the keys to our planet's past and future. We discuss human courage, scientific discovery, and the urgent stories emerging from Earth's poles……and from Greenland.
In my first episode back in quite some time, I figured I'd take you on a journey to the literal ends of the earth. Today I'm speaking with scientist, educator and author Neil Shubin. He's spent much of his life doing research in the Arctic and Antarctica. These are some of the last remaining untouched areas in this world. In his latest book, titled 'Ends of the Earth: Journeys to the Polar Regions In Search Of Life, The Cosmos, and Our Future', Shubin discusses a place that he saw his footprints still intact after 6 years. His descriptions of his time in Antarctica sound almost like fiction, but they are in fact real. I was blown away by so much in this book and it was a true pleasure to speak with Neil. I hope you enjoy our conversation.For more from Neil Shubin's book - Ends Of The EarthNeil on social media - BlueSky - Instagram
Maria chats with renowned scientist, explorer and author Neil Shubin about his latest book Ends of the Earth, which will be out Feb 4th.Neil has been exploring the north and south poles for over three decades! So much can be learned from ice, rocks, and nature which helps us understand the planet and our future.
"Just so we're clear, you stole a car, shot a bouncer, and had sex with two women?"On today's episode, we're celebrating Christmas with an unconventional pick for the season, as we cover the absolute banger that is Go! (1999). This movie is such a fun, frenetic time, and I can't help but enjoy myself when I watch this. To add to this conversation, I invited the clown daddy of Los Angeles himself, Seth Shubin to talk about this film, and how fantastic it is. You don't want to miss this episode!ARTICLES REFERENCED:"How 'Go', the Wildest, Druggiest, Horniest Cult Movie of 1999 Got Made (And Almost Didn't)"by Paul SchrodtApril 30th, 2024CLICK HERE----"Don't Let It 'Go' Away: The Frantic, Furious Making of a Cult Movie Classicby Eric DuckerMarch 29th, 2019CLICK HERE----Intro/Outro Music: "Phantom Fun" by Jonathan Boyle----Show E-Mail: cultcinemacircle@gmail.com----Follow Seth on InstagramFollow Cult Cinema Circle on Instagram, Bluesky, and Letterboxd Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Episode Description: Paleontologist Dr. Yara Haridy comes on about turtles, deep time, and a post revolution museum rescue for the WOH pod Season 3 Finale. In their own words: Yara Haridy is a Postdoc at the University of Chicago in the Shubin lab currently studying the early evolution of mineralized tissues in vertebrates. Yara got her paleontological start by volunteering, then progressing to do a master's at the University of Toronto Mississauga where she studied the histology of tooth replacement and development in early reptiles. Yara completed her Ph.D. in Berlin Germany at the Museum für Natrurkunde (Museum of natural history). Her thesis focused on the evolution of osteocytes and bone cellularity in the fossil record, she pioneered the use of FIB-SEM tomography for nano-level imaging on fossil cells. Yara is currently searching for the earliest mineralizing vertebrates in the fossil record, to better understand the origin of our skeletal biology. When not cutting up fossils, Yara is committing her time to DEI efforts in paleontology and science communication. Join Us In Supporting Beit el Baraka https://beitelbaraka.org/donate-now/?fbclid=PAZXh0bgNhZW0CMTEAAaZT48KxvRAJk0BB2TrNKHJHXDKwLgDoGg7W_bzqOqQY6NA_wsa8OIkGR18_aem_v5LFMj2DHu-61pUSO_i6og Help us keep making the show: Patreon.com/WeOutHerePod Twitter and IG @TheWeOutHerePod Start learning about whose land you're on and begin taking action https://native-land.ca/
Content Warning: Light Profanity Episode Description: Paleontologist Yara Haridy comes on about turtles, deep time, and a post revolution museum rescue for the WOH pod Season 3 Finale. In their own words: Yara Haridy is a Postdoc at the University of Chicago in the Shubin lab currently studying the early evolution of mineralized tissues in vertebrates. Yara got her paleontological start by volunteering, then progressing to do a master's at the University of Toronto Mississauga where she studied the histology of tooth replacement and development in early reptiles. Yara completed her Ph.D. in Berlin Germany at the Museum für Natrurkunde (Museum of natural history). Her thesis focused on the evolution of osteocytes and bone cellularity in the fossil record, she pioneered the use of FIB-SEM tomography for nano-level imaging on fossil cells. Yara is currently searching for the earliest mineralizing vertebrates in the fossil record, to better understand the origin of our skeletal biology. When not cutting up fossils, Yara is committing her time to DEI efforts in paleontology and science communication. Help us keep making the show: Patreon.com/WeOutHerePod Twitter and IG @TheWeOutHerePod Start learning about whose land you're on and begin taking action https://native-land.ca/
Today's episode is going to focus on management of patellar instability – including nonsurgical treatment, MPFL reconstruction techniques and the addition of other procedures including trochleoplasty and osteotomies. We are joined today by two outstanding guests! Dr. Miho Tanaka is a Professor of Orthopedic Surgery at Harvard Medical School and the Director of the women sports medicine program at Mass General Brigham. She is also the head team physician for the New England Revolution and team physician for the Boston Red Sox, Boston ballet and Boston Glory.Dr. Beth Shubin Stein is an orthopaedic surgeon at the Hospital for Special Surgery and Professor of Orthopaedic Surgery at Weill Cornell Medical College. She is also the Co-Director of the women's sports medicine center at HSS and the Director of the Patellofemoral Center at HSS.So, without further ado, let's get to the Field House!
This set was recorded at the DISTRICT party on 08/06/2024 mixed by @denisshubin
Former Islanders defenseman Eric Cairns and Island Harvest President/CEO Randi Shubin Dresner join "The Double Chili Islanders Podcast" with Peter Schwartz. The Islanders were part of an event at the Island Harvest Food Bank in Melville on Long Island. Stop & Shop presented a check to Island Harvest for $10,700 as a result of the Islanders racking up 214 home ice assists this past season. That's $50 for every assist. Scentury Candle Co. is our proud new sponsor and maker of the Double Chili Islander scented candle . This is the ONLY place you can buy an exclusive Double Chili candle. This candle is the perfect gift for chili lovers, Islander fans, and rare candle enthusiasts. Purchase the Double Chili Candle, and make your home smell like an Islander win!! Click the link to buy! Only available until June 1st.https://www.etsy.com/listing/1732109345/smells-like-an-islanders-win-candle*****************************************Any Mission Anywhere is a proud sponsor of our podcast. Pick up your hockey apparel with Any Mission Anywhere. Any Mission Anywhere proudly supports veteran and first responder non-profit hockey organizations. https://anymissionanywhere.com
Have you ever noticed a friend who always cancels plans last minute? It might be due to social anxiety disorder symptoms having kicked into their system, instead of rudeness. Everyone experiences some level of social anxiousness at one time or another, but those with SAD experience an above-average to severe level of worry, fear, and panic in social situations. Social anxiety disorder (SAD) is defined as the “marked and persistent fear of one or more social or performance situations in which the person is exposed to unfamiliar people or possible scrutiny by others.” Disclaimer: The information in this video is not intended nor implied to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. All content, including text, graphics, images, and information, contained in this video is for general information purposes only and does not replace a consultation with your own doctor or mental health professional. To raise mental health awareness, we also made a video on the signs you're depressed, not lazy: https://youtu.be/q8HRGiUeZwc Script Writer: Syazwana Amirah Script Editor: Vanessa Tao Script Manager: Kelly Soong VO: Amanda Silvera Animator: Aury YouTube Manager: Cindy Cheong References: American Psychiatric Association. (2013). Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders (5th ed.). https://doi.org/10.1176/appi.books.9780890425596 Casarella, J. (n.d.). Tips for living with social anxiety disorder. Retrieved April 22, 2021, from https://www.webmd.com/anxiety-panic/tips-for-living-with-social-anxiety Cuncic, A., & Morin, A. (2020, September 23). How to deal with social anxiety at a party. Retrieved April 22, 2021, from https://www.verywellmind.com/how-to-deal-with-social-anxiety-at-a-party-3024417 Cuncic, A., & Gans, S. (2020, March 20). Things to start doing if you have social anxiety disorder. Retrieved April 22, 2021, from https://www.verywellmind.com/social-anxiety-disorder-tips-3024209 Cuncic, A., & Morin, A. (2019, September 11). What to do if you fear eating in public. Retrieved April 22, 2021, from https://www.verywellmind.com/why-am-i-afraid-to-eat-in-front-of-people-3024319 Cuncic, A., & Morin, A. (2020, November 19). How to overcome eye contact anxiety. Retrieved April 22, 2021, from https://www.verywellmind.com/how-do-i-maintain-good-eye-contact-3024392#citation-3 Fuller, K. (2020, June 11). When anxiety turns to anger: Relationship of anxiety and anger. Retrieved April 22, 2021, from https://discoverymood.com/blog/anxiety-and-anger/ Glashow, C. (2021, February 23). Why people with anxiety cancel plans last minute. Retrieved April 22, 2021, from https://www.anchortherapy.org/blog/anxiety-why-cancel-plans-hoboken-jerseycity-hudson-county-nj-therapist-counselor Schulze, L., Renneberg, B., & Lobmaier, J. S. (2013). Gaze perception in social anxiety and social anxiety disorder. Frontiers in Human Neuroscience, 7. doi:10.3389/fnhum.2013.00872 Smith, M., Segal, J., & Shubin, J. (n.d.). Social anxiety disorder. Retrieved April 22, 2021, from https://www.helpguide.org/articles/anxiety/social-anxiety-disorder.htm Wolff, C., & Beurkens, N. (2020, April 01). Social anxiety is no Joke: Here Are Expert-Backed coping strategies. Retrieved April 22, 2021, from https://www.mindbodygreen.com/articles/social-anxiety-disorder-causes-symptoms-and-how-to-treat-it CONNECT WITH US: Official Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/psych2go_tips/ Official Discord: https://discord.gg/rRqJMFYV Join this channel to get access to perks: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCkJEpR7JmS36tajD34Gp4VA/join Would you like to animate for the team? Check out this: https://psych2go.net/interested-in-animating-for-pych2go-faq/ Interested in writing for psych2go? Check out: https://psych2go.net/script-writing-position-faqs/
It takes our sun 220 million years to orbit around the middle of our home galaxy. But that kind of timescale can be difficult to picture. So, using the International Stratigraphy Chart as a guidance for what different time periods mean in terms of millions of years, let's zoom out to the scale of a galactic year and see what happened in Earth's prehistory one cycle ago, two and so on. Sources for this episode: Bach, J. R. (2013), Paradigm paralysis in the management of neuromuscular disease. Journal of Personalized Medicine 11: 24-29. Bottjer, E. J. (2005), The Early Evolution of Animals. Scientific American 293(2): 42-47. Brusatte, S. L., Butler, R. J., Barrett, P. M., Carrion, M. T., Evans, D. C., Lloyd, G. T., Mannion, P. D., Norell, M. A., Peppe, D. J., Upchurch, P. and Williamson, T. E. (2015), The extinction of the dinosaurs. Biological Reviews 90: 628-642. Cameron, G. G. (1968), Zoroaster the Herdsman. Indo-Iranian Journal 10(4): 261-281. Clack, J. A. (2006), Devonian climate change, breathing, and the origin of the tetrapod stem group. Integrative and Comparative Biology 47(4): 510-523. Cohen, K. M., Finney, S. C., Gibbard, P. L. and Fan, J.-X. (2013; updated). The ICS International Chronostratigraphic Chart. Episodes 36: 199-204. Downs, J. P., Daeschler, E. B., Jenkins, F. A. and Shubin, N. H. (2008), The cranial endoskeleton of Tiktaalik roseae. Nature 455: 925-929. Ellery, A. (2003), Book Review: Impossible Extinction- Natural catastrophes and the supremacy of the microbial world. International Journal of Astrobiology 2(2): 153-154. Galway-Whitham, J. and Stringer, G. (2018), How did Homo sapiens evolve? Science 360(6395): 1296-1298. Hazen, R. M. (2010), How Old is Earth, and How Do We Know? Evolution: Education and Outreach 3: 198-205. Hess, F. L. (1925), The Age of the Earth. The Scientific Monthly 20(6): 597-602. Kemp, B. and Zink, A. (2012), Life in Ancient Egypt: Akhenaten, the Amarna Period and Tutankhamun. RCC Perspectives No. 3- Sickness, Hunger, War and Religion: Multidisciplinary Perspectives: 9-24. Kvĕt, R. (1991), Complete Periodical Geological Time Table. GeoJournal 24(4): 417-420. Kvĕt, R. (1995), On the Dependence of Life Evolution on Geotectonic Stages. GeoJournal 37(4): 413-417. Lemberg, J. B., Daeschler, E. B. and Shubin, N. H. (2021), The feeding system of Tiktaalik roseae: an intermediate between suction feeding and biting. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 118(7): e2016421118. MacIver, M. A., Schmitz, L., Mutan U., Murphey, T. D. and Mobley, C. D. (2020), Massive increase in visual range preceded the origin of terrestrial vertebrates. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America: E2375-E2384. Meiri, S. (2022), Population sizes of T. rex cannot be precisely estimated. Frontiers of Biogeography 14(2): e53781. Roney, J. C. (2017), 1776, Viewed from the West. Journal of the Early Republic 37(4): 655-700. Sereno, P. C. (1997), The Origin and Evolution of Dinosaurs. Annual Review of Earth and Planetary Sciences 25: 435-489. Vandepoele, K., De Vos, W., Taylor, J. S., Meyer, A. and Van de Peer, Y. (2004), Major events in the genome evolution of vertebrates: Paranome age and size differ considerably between ray-finned fishes and land vertebrates. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 101(6): 1638-1643. Vittinghof, F. (1985), Reviewed Work(s): The Roman Empire 27 B. C. - A. D. 476. A Study in Survival by Chester G. Starr. Gnomon 57 Bd., H. 6: 572-574. Zhuralev, A. Y. and Wood, R. A. (2018), The two phases of the Cambrian Explosion. Scientific Reports 8: 16656. Życiński, J. (2006), Ethics in medical technologies: The Roman Catholic viewpoint. Journal of Clinical Neuroscience 13: 518-523.
We watched John Waters' magnum opus "Female Trouble" and there's gonna be hell to pay if we don't get them cha-cha heels! John Waters is being hailed as the Pope of Trash and if you weren't sure why, go watch this movie. Dawn Davenport (Divine) is a thief and a sh!t kicker and she wants to be famous. I mean did this movie predict social media fame culture? Dawn as played by John's muse Divine is the ultimate bad girl and we as the audience get to track her journey from surley school girl to working single mom and finally to the worlds most glamorous criminal. Don't worry though, Dawn gets hers and goodness prevails in the end. Along for the ride are the usual Dreamland favorites, Mink Stole, David Lochary, Mary Vivian Pierce and of course Aunt Ida herself the incomprable Edith Massey. Aunt Ida was the first voice ever heard on this podcast and we couldn't have said it better ourselves... "The world of othe heterosexual is a sick and boring life." Thanks for listening and don't forget to subscribe, rate and review us on Apple Podcasts! www.patreon.com/moviesthatmadeusgay Facebook/Instagram: @moviesthatmadeusgay Twitter: @MTMUGPod Scott Youngbauer: Twitter @oscarscott / Instagram @scottyoungballer Peter Lozano: Twitter/Instagram @peterlasagna
Flute 360 | Episode 257: “A Holistic Approach to Music Making with Emma Shubin” Body movement in music performance is often a hotly debated topic. We may find ourselves inquiring, “Is my movement getting in the way of my performance?” or “Do I need more movement in order to avoid looking stiff or robotic?” Emma Shubin's answer to this argument is simple. Since recently beginning her Ph.D. at the University of Luxembourg, Emma has dived into research on how music and movement affect instrumental learning in the early years. She strives to support the idea that movement is a tool waiting to be accessed through the embodiment of our whole authentic selves. Emma's words will inspire you to reimagine your approach to music-making. If this topic resonates with you, then the Flute 360 Accelerator Program is the perfect community for you! Join us for our next Flute 360 Accelerator Program meetup! It's scheduled for Saturday, July 29, 2023 from 11:00 AM to 1:00 PM / CT! If you register for the month of July, then you get a free 1-hour lesson with Dr. Begay! Episode 257 – Main Points: 2:27 – About Emma's recent move to Luxembourg 6:09 – How Emma and Heidi met 8:32 – Using movement as a tool 12:23 – Learning with our whole selves 17:22 – How music and movement affect instrumental learning in the early years 27:12 – Expressing ourselves through body movement - Heidi's story 35:48 – For 360er's who feel awkward on stage 42:32 – Why visualization works 46:58 – A new approach to practice 53:36 – Where to find Emma's information Episode 257 – Resources Mentioned: Join the Flute 360's Accelerator Program Here! Join us Saturday, 7/29/23 from 11:00 AM CT to 1:00 PM CT! Register in July 2023, and you get a FREE 1-hour lesson with me! Schedule a 15-minute call to chat with Heidi! Join the Flute 360 Family's Facebook Private Group! Episode 87: Dalcroze Eurhythmics and Integrative Education with Emma Shubin Music Together Sponsors: Carolyn Nussbaum Music Company – Your One-Stop Flute Shop! Visit the Wm.S. Haynes' Website! Guest's Links: Website Instagram Facebook Haynes Artist Profile Integral Steps (non-profit) Follow Heidi! Follow Flute 360 via TikTok! Follow Flute 360 via Instagram! Follow Flute 360 via Twitter! Follow Flute 360 via LinkedIn! Follow Flute 360 via Facebook! Join the Flute 360 Newsletter! Join the Flute 360 Family's Facebook Private Group! Join the Flute 360's Accelerator Program Here! Subscribe to the Flute 360's YouTube Channel!
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PART 3: Hey girl, thank you for being here! In this episode 3 part episode (this is part 2 of 3), Michelle shares her journey of infertility and how she has found purpose through her pain. Michelle is a wife and a mom to a beautiful boy. She grew up in a christian home in whittier, graduated from Biola University, and was a 7th grade world history teacher. Michelle and her husband have been married for 22 years, and had tried for many years to get pregnant. Her story is very tough but is also full of hope. I hope her story gives you hope. Are you following me on IG? @thebraveinher
PART 2: Hey girl, thank you for being here! In this episode 3 part episode (this is part 2 of 3), Michelle shares her journey of infertility and how she has found purpose through her pain. Michelle is a wife and a mom to a beautiful boy. She grew up in a christian home in whittier, graduated from Biola University, and was a 7th grade world history teacher. Michelle and her husband have been married for 22 years, and had tried for many years to get pregnant. Her story is very tough but is also full of hope. I hope her story gives you hope. Are you following me on IG? @thebraveinher
Hey girl, thank you for being here! In this episode 3 part episode (this is part 1 of 3), Michelle shares her journey of infertility and how she has found purpose through her pain. Michelle is a wife and a mom to a beautiful boy. She grew up in a christian home in whittier, graduated from Biola University, and was a 7th grade world history teacher. Michelle and her husband have been married for 22 years, and had tried for many years to get pregnant. Her story is very tough but is also full of hope. I hope her story gives you hope. Are you following me on IG? @thebraveinher
Full tracklist: https://ambermuse.com/amber-muse-radio-show-318-with-taran-lomov-denis-shubin-guest-mix-20-jan-2023/
Heidi Shubin, owner of Sugardaddy's Women's Boutique, guides us on compensating for a wide demand variety, attracting men into a women's-based industry, avoiding the temptation to buy too much inventory, and...rescuing pitbulls is like running a business? 00:00 Introduction 00:45 Creating A 40-Year Local Staple 09:13 Attracting Men Into A Women's Industry 18:17 Compensating For A Wide Variety Of Demand 28:08 Final Thoughts: "You Can Learn About A Man By The Joke He Tells" 30:06 Credits #smallbusiness #smallbusinessowner #smallbusinesstips #smallbusinessidea #smallbusinessideas #smallbusinesstips #smallbusinesscelebration #smallbusinesscelebration #marcomgroup #homerunentertainment #sugardaddyswomensbotique #heidshubin @smallbusinesscelebration @michaeliroberts @drj @drjuanitawebb @jwebbconsulting Reach out to us at: https://smallbusinesscelebration.com Reach out to our guest at: hhttp://sugardaddysboutique.com
KNOCKERS, GOBLINS, GNOMES AND ALIENSImagine you rarely saw the sun, and most of your short existence was spent deep underground, 10 hours a day, 6 days of the week. That was the life of a tin miner in 18th and 19th century England with many not living past the age of 30. The mines could reach out for some 2.5km under the sea, 640m deep, and miners would hear the thundering roar of boulders tumbling across the seabed above their heads. Devon and Cornwall's landscape is shaped deeply by its mining heritage and the fortitude of its mining communities. The work was hazardous and arduous with arsenic being a biproduct of the mining practice and children as young as 9 would haul out the barrows full of tin ore. Given scant respite and seeing very little of the sun, is it any wonder that reports of paranormal creatures, who lived deep in the twisted tunnels, have been spoken of by miners not only in the west of England but across the world.In Devon & Cornwall, these subterranean spirits are known as the knockers, and no doubt when mining communities traversed the Atlantic Ocean to America, they took their tales with them and the Tommyknockers were spawned. In Wales they are known as the Coblynau, in Germany Kobold, in the Ukraine they are known as Shubin and there are variations of these small, goblin like beasts in many of the mining countries.In the UK miners would take precautionary measures and leave offerings for the knockers to keep in their good favour, often a portion of their Cornish pasty, as if they became irritated, they would steal and hide your tools or lead you deep into the cave system, never to be seen or heard of again. The knockers could be heard prior to a disaster, banging on cavernous walls inside the mining shafts, perhaps in warning that a mine was about to cave in but according to some legends however, the knockers are malevolent spirits and if their banging is heard, it is not to warn the miners, but the sound of them sabotaging the mine supports to bring the ceiling down.Resources:IntroductionCornish MinesStory 1 Story 2Thanks so much for listening and we'll catch up with you again next week for some more true, scary stories.Sarah and Tobie xxJoin us on InstagramJoin us on TwitterJoin us on FacebookVisit our Website Get bonus content on Patreon Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
“L.A is like… nowhere. Everyone who lives here is lost.” We put some gas in the VCR this week to talk about the Gregg Araki film Nowhere with guest Seth Shubin @jerkofalltrades. Described in the marketing as “90210 was on Acid” this cast is a who's who of up and coming Hollywood. With early appearances by Ryan Phillippe, Heather Graham, Scott Caan, Mena Suvari, Denise Richards, as well as Araki staple James Duval, Nowhere is one of the hidden gems of the 90s. We talk about the once again genius castings of his films (Christina Applegate, Guillermo Diaz, Kathleen Robertson), the more insane celebrity cameos, and terrific soundtrack that's still a staple of our car CD player. Get your date to Jujyfrui's party, (I thought YOU were going with Tomas?), and take the ride with us to Araki's teenage apocalypse. Thanks for listening and don't forget to subscribe, rate and review us on Apple Podcasts! www.patreon.com/moviesthatmadeusgay Facebook/Instagram: @moviesthatmadeusgay Twitter: @MTMUGPod Scott Youngbauer: Twitter @oscarscott / Instagram @scottyoungballer Peter Lozano: Twitter/Instagram @peterlasagna
A little over two years ago, Adrienne Shubin, author of the Change Your Midlife blog, began transforming her life. Starting with going alcohol free for 30 days, it evolved into staying alcohol free, switching to a plant-based diet, getting rid of clutter, losing weight, and becoming debt free. You'll enjoy…
Welcome to Season 3 of the My Curious Colleague Podcast...! I'm honored for Marie Shubin, CEO of SOCAP (Society of Consumer Affairs Professionals) industry group to return to the podcast. Marie has been a leader & a welcomed fixture within the Consumer Care Community for the past 25+ years. Along with sharing SOCAP's vision along four core pillars, Marie shares a sneak peek of timing she shares for some key events this year. Foremost is SOCAP's vision and deliverables in support of professional development for it's members. Marie's ideal is to offer an opportunity every week to learn & grow - whether it be Tuesday Tech Talks, Timely Topics, webinars, roundtables across a variety of industries, regional groups, Manager to CSR tracks and topics...! So open up your calendars and start penciling in exciting events... especially the two - yes 2 - Symposiums in the works. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/denise-venneri/support
What connects survival cannibalism and the house of Romanov? The answer is, of course, the Battle of Moscow of 1612. TRANSCRIPT https://castinglotspod.home.blog/2021/12/16/s3-e8-ice-part-ii---the-polish-muscovite-war/ CREDITS Written, hosted and produced by Alix Penn and Carmella Lowkis. Theme music by Daniel Wackett. Find him on Twitter @ds_wack and Soundcloud as Daniel Wackett. Logo by Riley. Find her on Twitter and Instagram @tallestfriend. Casting Lots is part of the Morbid Audio Podcast Network. Network sting by Mikaela Moody. Find her on Bandcamp as mikaelamoody1. BIBLIOGRAPHY ‘Battle of Moscow (1612).' (2021). Wikipedia. Available at: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Moscow_(1612) Bond, J. et al. (2010). ‘Cannibalism in medieval europe/asia'. 7 September. Total War Centre. Available at: http://www.twcenter.net/forums/showthread.php?387622-cannibalism-in-medieval-europe-asia Cavendish, R. (2013). ‘The First of the Romanov Tsars is Crowned', History Today, 63(7). Available at: https://www.historytoday.com/archive/first-romanov-tsars-crowned Doultseva, T. et al. (2020). To the younger generation living abroad about the heroic feat of the Defenders of the Russian Land: from the Battle of the Neva to the Capture of Berlin. Jyväskylä: Mosaiikki. Available at: http://mosaiikki.info/history/books/bookEng/HistoryEng.pdf Istmira. (n.d.). Second people's militia-briefly. Available at: https://www.istmira.com/w-hist/history-of-russia/3943-second-peoples-militia-briefly.html Kluchevsky, V.O. (1913). A History of Russia. Vol. 3. Translated by C.J. Hogarth. London: J.M. Dent. Available at: http://www2.dsu.nodak.edu/users/dmeier/A%20History%20of%20Russia,%20Volume%203,%20V.O.%20Kliuchevsky.pdf KP-TTS. (2020). The last days of Poles in the Kremlin. Battle of the Great Field Exile Polish Interventory in 1612. Available at: https://kp-tts.ru/en/iii-poslednie-dni-polyakov-v-kremle-bitva-na-devichem-pole-izgnanie-polskih.html Malloy, D. (2017). Natasha, Pierre & the Great Comet of 1812 (Original Broadway Cast Recording). New York: I Hear Guitars. Available at: https://open.spotify.com/album/3Ohwm7WsUS6AJd56VnNlJX?si=hgF6vljGQMS5ecYBjCL-ww ‘Polish–Lithuanian occupation of Moscow'. (2021). Wikipedia. Available at: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polish%E2%80%93Lithuanian_occupation_of_Moscow ‘Polish–Muscovite War (1605–1618)'. (2021). Wikipedia. Available at: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polish%E2%80%93Muscovite_War_(1605%E2%80%931618) Shubin, D.H. (2009). ‘The Era of Tsar Boris Feodorovich Godunov', in Tsars and Imposters. New York, NY: Algora, pp. 57-78. Thompson, J.M. (2012). ‘Ivan the Terrible and the Time of Troubles', in Russia and the Soviet Union. Boulder, CO: Westview Press. Tucker, S.C. (ed.) (2010). ‘Eastern Europe: Polish-Russian War (Continued)', in A Global Chronology of Conflict. Vol. 2. Santa Barbara, CA: ABC-CLIO, p. 564. Available at: https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=h5_tSnygvbIC&pg=PA564&lpg=PA564#v=onepage&q&f=false Woźnica, K. (2016). ‘Famine and poverty in the army during the reign of the House of Vasa in the light of reports and diaries', Historia i Świat, 5, pp. 169-190. Available at: https://repozytorium.uph.edu.pl/bitstream/handle/11331/2412/Famine_and_poverty_in_the_army.pdf?sequence=1
Today in botanical history, we celebrate the botanical name of the Saguaro Cactus, a Russian writer and mystic, and November potpourri. We'll hear an excerpt from Tom Perrotta's best-selling 2011 book. We Grow That Garden Library™ with a book that celebrates the Islamic Garden. And then we'll wrap things up with some hip Book Recommendations from 1975. Subscribe Apple | Google | Spotify | Stitcher | iHeart To listen to the show while you're at home, just ask Alexa or Google to “Play the latest episode of The Daily Gardener Podcast.” And she will. It's just that easy. The Daily Gardener Friday Newsletter Sign up for the FREE Friday Newsletter featuring: A personal update from me Garden-related items for your calendar The Grow That Garden Library™ featured books for the week Gardener gift ideas Garden-inspired recipes Exclusive updates regarding the show Plus, each week, one lucky subscriber wins a book from the Grow That Garden Library™ bookshelf. Gardener Greetings Send your garden pics, stories, birthday wishes, and so forth to Jennifer@theDailyGardener.org Facebook Group If you'd like to check out my curated news articles and original blog posts for yourself, you're in luck. I share all of it with the Listener Community in the Free Facebook Group - The Daily Gardener Community. So, there's no need to take notes or search for links. The next time you're on Facebook, search for Daily Gardener Community, where you'd search for a friend... and request to join. I'd love to meet you in the group. Curated News Getting Happier with Horticulture: The Healthy Benefits of Gardening | gradynewsource.uga.edu | Gianna Perani Important Events November 2, 1902 On this day, Nathaniel Britton, one of the founders of the New York Botanical Garden, wrote to the industrialist and philanthropist Andrew Carnegie asking for permission to name a genus of Giant Cactus native to Arizona and northern Mexico in his honor. Three days later, Mr. Carnegie's secretary responded: “Mr. Carnegie has yours of November 2nd and asks me to say he is greatly honored by the proposal and will do his best to live up to it.” And so, the majestic Saguaro ("suh-GWAR-oh") Cactus, the largest cactus in the United States and a plant synonymous with the American West, was christened the Carnegiea gigantea. Saguaros can live for over two centuries. The Saguaro root system has one large tap root accompanied by a very intricate and shallow root system that lies within the top three inches of the soil. Any precious drops of rain are guided down to the ground beneath its mighty arms. After thirty-five years of life, Saguaro's produce a white night-blooming flower that is bat-pollinated. Saguaros begin to develop their arms after reaching the age of fifty. The average Saguaro weighs three tons. The largest Saguaro ever recorded was called "Granddaddy." Granddaddy stood forty feet tall, had over 52 limbs, and was estimated to be three hundred years old. November 2, 1906 Birth of Daniil Andreyev ("Da-NEEL An-drave"), Russian writer, poet, and mystic. He wrote a book called The Rose of the World over eight-and-a-half years as a prisoner in a Stalin prison camp. Daniil once wrote, "Perhaps the worst will never come to pass, and tyranny on such a scale will never recur. Perhaps humanity will forevermore retain the memory of Russia's terrible historical experience. Every heart nurses that hope, and without it life would be unbearable." Daniil had uncanny powers of recall and memory. He was also a voracious reader and grew his personal library to over 2,000 books by the time he was arrested in 1947. Daniil suffered from a spinal defect and wore an iron corset while in prison to cope with the pain. Daniil began having mystic experiences as an adolescent. His first poem was called The Garden. In 1949, at the Vladimir high-security prison, Daniil started to have regular spiritual encounters and visions. And so he used those experiences to write Rose of the World at night. He had his final transcendent revelation in November of 1953 and then finished the book after his release from prison in 1957. And then, Daniil kept the book to himself - hiding it from the government in order to keep it from being destroyed. Daniil's Rose of the World remained hidden before finally getting published in 1991 under Gorbachev. The Rose of the World was an instant bestseller. Daniel H. Shubin wrote the latest English translation in 2018. Shubin writes that, “[Daniil] Envisioned the reign of rows of the world on Earth in the twenty-third century, the future Epoch being a golden age of humanity, whose essence will develop… into a close connection between God and people. It includes a society that consists of a worldwide ecclesiastical fraternity.” Daniil himself explained Rose of the World this way: Rose of the World can be compared to an inverted flower whose root is in heaven, while the petal bowl is here, among Humanity, on Earth. Its stem is the revelation through which the spiritual sap flows, sustaining and strengthening its petals... But other than the petals, it also has a pith; this is its individual teaching. November 2, 1954 On this day, The Journal Herald (Dayton, Ohio) ran a little snippet on the wonder of Potpourri from the November garden. The November garden has her odors. In most instances, they are not so beguiling as those of spring and summer, yet they are far from displeasing. There is the sharp, vinegary tang that rises from leaves, sodden and cold. There is the odor of soil on which frost has laid whiteness; an odor, which seems different from that of earth newly turned in spring. There is the pungence that rises from rotting apples and pears; and the heavy fragrance which issues from the chrysanthemum leaf and blossom. Occasionally a flower remains whose breath is that of July. Even though the hand of chill has pressed heavily on the garden, the sweet alyssum has summer perfume. And a rose, spared, has a scent which speaks nostalgically of June. But in the main, the odor of the November garden is distinctive, sharp, penetrating, and has something of that element of age, which cannot be associated with redolence but rather with a potpourri. Unearthed Words She felt strong and blissfully empty, gliding through the crisp November air, enjoying the intermittent warmth of the sun as it filtered down through the overhanging trees, which were mostly stripped of their foliage. It was that trashy, post-Halloween part of the fall, yellow and orange leaves littering the ground. ― Tom Perrotta, The Leftovers Grow That Garden Library The Art of the Islamic Garden by Emma Clark This book came out in 2011 - so an oldie, but goodie. (It's already ten years old.) And here's what Emma wrote at the beginning of this book: Even a glimmer of understanding of traditional Islamic art and architecture clearly reveals that its beauty is not simply surface decoration, but is a reflection of a deep knowledge and understanding of the natural order and of the divine unity that penetrates all of our lives. Studying Islamic art and architecture and completing a master's thesis on Islamic gardens and garden carpet at the Royal college of art opened my eyes to the meaning of art. Understanding something of the religion of Islam in general and Islamic art in particular, it became clear that all art to a greater or lesser degree should be a vehicle of hope. It should remind us what it means to be human of our place in the universe and our role as is said in Islam as God's vice-regent on earth. And then she writes, and bear in mind; this is 2011: In the increasingly difficult times in which we live, it is good to be reminded that gardens and nature, transcend nationality, race, religion, color, and ideology. The Islamic garden is not only for Muslims, it's beauty is apparent to everyone. In her book, Emma offers an introduction to the design, the symbolism, and the planting of the traditional Islamic garden. Emma also gives some practical tips if you're interested in creating an Islamic garden for yourself. Emma points out that we all have different starting points for our gardens. We have different garden sizes and situations (urban garden or a country garden), obviously different climates and soils, etc. And so, she spends a couple of chapters offering up ideas for plants and trees and shrubs that you might want to consider incorporating into an Islamic-inspired garden. Now there is a pattern to Islamic gardens. They're often constructed around a central pool or fountain with four streams flowing symbolically to the earth's four corners. My favorite part of this book is exploring the symbolism behind Islamic art and gardens. And by the way, there is a magnificent chapter in this book that is all about the prince of Wales carpet garden. It's just spectacular. Now this book is out of print, and I predict that copies of this book will only get harder to get as time goes on. So if you have any interest, you should make sure that this one gets on your list. You can get a copy of The Art of the Islamic Garden by Emma Clark and support the show using the Amazon Link in today's Show Notes for around $26. Today's Botanic Spark Reviving the little botanic spark in your heart November 2, 1975 On this day, The New York Times Around the Garden segment recommended some new garden books. Some bright newcomers have been added to the trowel‐watering can library. Here they are. Masakuni Kawasumi spent three years in this country adapting his Japanese methods of bonsai growing to American species of trees. His “Bonsai With American Trees” ($10, Kodansha International) is the result, an excellent basic primer... Tapeworm plant, living stones bead vine, spiderweb, and polka dot are a few of the off‐beat plants described in “Fun With Growing Odd and Curious House Plants” Virginie and George Elbert ($8.95, Crown). The odd‐sized book, 6½ x 11 inches, gives brief biographies and how‐to‐grow tips for many unusual house plants, delightful changes from the tried‐and‐true. And while on the subject of fun, there is Jack Kramer's “How to Identify & Care for House Plants” ($8.95, Doubleday). The fun comes in matching line‐drawings and silhouettes to the author's organizational key. Though probably not meant to be a puzzle book, it is. ...a plant number 8‐1‐3 turns out to be none other than a cattleya orchid. Thalassa Cruso, television “lady of the trowel” has done it again. This time she is telling about “Making Vegetables Grow” ($8.95, Knopf), one of her best with chatty helpful tips on bringing the crop in abundantly. Light gardens are booming, especially among those who have dark apartments and want some greenery indoors. “The Complete Book of Houseplants Under Lights” by Charles Marden Fitch ($9.95, Hawthorn) updates the hobby and is full of ideas. Joining the series of “state” books on wildflowers by John E. Klimas Jr., is “A Pocket Guide to the Common Wild Flowers of New York” ($5.95, Walker). Compact tuck in a backpack, Descriptions are in everyday language, not botanist's twang. Environmental awareness has come full circle with “Organic Flower Gardening” by Catherine Osgood Foster ($12.95, Rodale Press). An organic gardener's book on raising flowers? Mrs. Foster explains why, “One is for the sake of the bees, wasps and other beneficial insects and butterflies … another good reason is to protect the birds … the most important is that you avoid starting chain reactions in the environment from poisonous chemical sprays and dusts you might introduce.” And for winter reading by the fireplace, here are a few: “A Gardener Touched With Genius, The Life of Luther Burbank” by Peter Dreyer ($10, Coward, McCann & Geoghegan): “The Best of American Gardening” by Ken and Pat Kraft ($10, Walker), a clip hook of garden tips gleaned from 100‐year‐old seed catalogues; “The Plant Hunters” by B. J. Healey ($8.95, Scribners), a brief biography of discoverers of exotic species from the 17th century to the present. And for reference; “Ornamental Grasses” by Mary Hockenberry Meyer ($9.95, Scribners), an excellent well-illustrated guide to this unusual group of plants. “The Personal Garden, Its Architecture and Design” by Bernard Wolgensinger and Jose Daidone ($30, Van Nostrand Reinhold), beautifully illustrated with design concepts from European, Western and Japanese gardens. “Plant A Tree” by Michael A. Weiner ($15.95, Macmillan) subtitled, “A working guide to regreening America.” Good reference book for city planners, libraries, and schools on tree planting and care, nationwide. Florida, Texas, and California where the avocado is grown commercially, the trees do not start flowering until six years old, or sooner if grafted. One rare exception was reported by Barbara Stimson, a gardener in Maine, who wrote in a recent Letters to the Editor, Flower and Garden, that her indoor avocado did flower, but no fruit, when it was about two years old and four feet high. Thanks for listening to The Daily Gardener. And remember: "For a happy, healthy life, garden every day."
En los años 80, las fuerzas aerotransportadas soviéticas dieron soporte directo a sus aliados desplegando pequeñas unidades de élite como los paracaidistas. El oficial Vyacheslav Mityaev nos ofrece una visión sorprendente de estas acciones sobre el terreno. Con 🚴 Esaú Rodríguez y 🏍️ Julio 'Caronte' Produce 👨🚀 Dani CarAn Edita 🧢 Criof FUENTE : G. V. Shubin, ed., (Moscow: Memories, 2007). Included in "Southern Africa in the Cold War, Post-1974," edited by Sue Onslow and Anna-Mart Van Wyk. ⭐ Casus Belli Podcast forma parte de 📀 Ivoox Originals. ⭐ Casus Belli Podcast pertenece a 🏭 Factoría Casus Belli. 👉https://podcastcasusbelli.com 👉En Facebook, nuestra página es @casusbellipodcast https://www.facebook.com/CasusBelliPodcast 👉En Instagram estamos como @casusbellipodcast https://www.instagram.com/casusbellipodcast 👉En Twitter estamos como @casusbellipod @CasusBelliPod 👉Telegram, nuestro canal es @casusbellipodcast https://t.me/casusbellipodcast 👨💻Nuestro chat del canal es https://t.me/aviones10 La música aparecida en este episodio lo hacen bajo la licencia privada de Jamendo Music, Epidemic Sound, o licencia global contratada y gestionada por IVOOX (SGAE RRDD/4/1074/1012), para el uso de "música comercial" del repertorio de la Sociedad de Gestión. El resto de música es bajo licencia Creative Commons 3.0 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nd/3.0/ ⚛️ El logotipo de Carros 10 y de la Factoría Casus Belli están diseñados por Publicidad Fabián publicidadfabian@yahoo.es 📧¿Queréis contarnos algo? También puedes escribirnos a casus.belli.pod@gmail.com Si te ha gustado, y crees que nos lo merecemos, nos sirve mucho que nos des un like, ya que nos da mucha visibilidad. Muchas gracias por escucharnos, y hasta la próxima. Escucha el episodio completo en la app de iVoox, o descubre todo el catálogo de iVoox Originals
The final episode as part of our Special Edition celebrating the stories of our past whilst telling them with a soundtrack of Reggae music. Our fourth & final to feature in this Special Edition is The Black Strategy Trio; featuring arguably the greatest visionaries of all time!Adapted Sources Creditedhttps://answersingenesis.org/creation-scientists/george-washington-carver-slave-to-scientist/https://www.sciencehistory.org/historical-profile/george-washington-carverhttps://www.worldhistory.org/imhotep/https://www.famous-architects.org/imhotep/https://www.medicalexamprep.co.uk/imhotep-first-physician/https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horace_Campbellhttp://www.jpanafrican.org/docs/vol10no5/10.5-15-Campbell.pdfHorace Campbell BooksCampbell, H. (2013), Global NATO and the Catastrophic Failure in Libya: Lessons for Africa in the Forging of African Unity, Monthly Review Press.Campbell, H. (2010), Barack Obama and 21st Century Politics, Pluto Press.[8]Campbell, H. (2007), "China in Africa: challenging US global hegemony" in Manji, F., and S. Marks (eds), African Perspectives on China in Africa, Oxford:Pambazuka Press.Campbell, H. (2006), Pan Africanists and African Liberation in the 21st Century, New Academia Publishers.Campbell, H. (2003), Reclaiming Zimbabwe: The Exhaustion of the Patriarchal Model of Liberation, New Jersey: Africa World Press; South Africa: David Phillip.Campbell, H. (1985), Rasta and Resistance: From Marcus Garvey to Walter Rodney, Hansib Publications (French translation published by Camion Blanc in 2014, foreword by Jérémie Kroubo Dagnini).Campbell, H. (2018), "Nelson Mandela: Ubuntu and the Universalist Spirit," in Shubin, V., and Zelenova, D. (eds), South Africa: Pages of History and Contemporary Politics, Moscow: Institute of African Studies.Campbell, H. (2018), "The Pan African Experience: From The OAU to the African Union," in Falola, T., and Shanguhyia, M.S., (eds): The Palgrave Handbook of African Colonial and Postcolonial History, New York: Palgrave, Macmillan.Please subscribe if you feel the vibe and connect with Danieal via www.danieal.co.ukDisclaimer : Reggae Uprising Podcast does not own any of the rights to any of the music. It is used only as a tool of education, upliftment and empowerment for and of people of the diaspora.
How far will you travel outside of your hometown, your neighborhood, your comfort zone, in order to see the world differently? Why is it important to keep your sense of insecurity as your companion as you embark on your scientific, academic or philosophical enquiry? How does failure keep you hungry for success? Those are some of the questions that have led to surprising discoveries and satisfying rewards for Dr. Neil Shubin (Harvard GSAS Class of 1987). In “Where Are They Now?” Episode #4, Gemma Schneider (Harvard student journalist/Class of 2023) interviews Dr. Neil Shubin - A paleontologist, evolutionary biologist, and popular science writer. Dr. Shubin made headlines in 2004 when he co-discovered Tiktaalik roseae, a fossil of a creature with traits found in both fish and tetrapods, and has since published three popular science books: Your Inner Fish, The Universe Within, and Some Assembly Required. I am happy to be co-hosting this podcast as a contributing commentator. You'll hear my reflection on how I, like Dr. Neil Shubin, first became drawn to a new world of possibilities that would light up my imagination to pursue a path that's formed who I am today. ———————— “Where Are They Now?” is a special co-production between One in a Billion and WHRB (Harvard Radio Broadcasting). It is a 6-part series featuring one-on-one interviews with Harvard graduates who draw lessons from their campus experience and personal insight from their current career to give you a taste of their trailblazing journey. “Where Are They Now” is sponsored exclusively by One in a Billion Productions Inc. (501c3) – an educational media company designed to foster Asian voices and to build bridges between different communities of color. We believe in the power of personal storytelling to reach a wider and diverse community of audiences for better intercultural understanding.
Dr. Neil Shubin, Harvard GSAS Class of 1987, is a paleontologist, evolutionary biologist, and popular science writer. Dr. Shubin made headlines in 2004 when he co-discovered Tiktaalik roseae, a fossil of a creature with traits found in both fish and tetrapods, and has since published three popular science books: Your Inner Fish, The Universe Within, and Some Assembly Required. In today's conversation, Gemma and Dr. Shubin unpack how Dr. Shubin's time-tested affinity for exploration ultimately manifested into a career that involves traveling to places as far-away and frigid as the Canadian Arctic. They also discuss the importance of challenge and failure – in both science and writing – before exploring how Dr. Shubin's landmark discovery of Tiktaalik dramatically altered the trajectory of his personal and professional life. Finally, at the end of this episode, contributing commentator Mable Chan (Harvard AM '93), will offer a commentary about the things that cannot be taught – in college or beyond – and which you must find on your own.
How did fish evolve to walk on land? What are the details of how that process happened? Today on The Soul of Life I speak with Neil Shubin, the 2004 co-discoverer of Tiktaalik, a fish fossil that is the first evidence of so-called bridge animals with features that show the evolutionary transition between swimming fish and land mammals. Shubin is the author of Your Inner Fish: A Journey into the 3.5-Billion-Year History of the Human Body and Some Assembly Required: Decoding Four Billion Years of Life, from Ancient Fossils to DNA. Neil guides us through a fascinating tour of the history of the human body. We talk about the remarkable building blocks inside DNA that are common to all living things, which is the topic of Shubin's latest book Some Assembly Required. "A lot of biology means using the old to make the new." Check out my Mini-Course for couples: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLHjcz6Ly2y9gr2mtMHIxu-fXXl8rE_PYJ Learn more about my 7-week, live, online basic mindfulness and IFS course for couples: https://souloflifeshow.com/mindful-marriage Join my Facebook Group called "Bring Love Alive:" https://www.facebook.com/groups/601405257684922 My Book, Love Under Repair: How to Save Your Marriage and Survive Couples Therapy https://amzn.to/2X3kPBL My Counseling Practice: https://keithmillercounseling.com Follow us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SoulOfLifeShow or Twitter: https://twitter.com/SoulofLifeShow Want to book Keith as a guest on your podcast? Contact him at keith@souloflifeshow.com.
This week we have the pleasure of sitting down with some good buddies who came up with theidea of starting a Brand of Mezcal while surfing. These 3 Amigos….. (which by the way wouldhave been an awesome name for the Brand)… Are all creative with a long history andbackground in Sales, Design, and Marketing. We are excited to hear about their individualstories, all the hard work that goes into creating an amazing Brand from the ground up andwhat is takes to break into the Alcohol Industry….. We welcome the Amigos Behind “DosBoots” Mezcal….. Carlos “Cantu” Gomes, Jim “Shub” Shubin and Joe “Mac” McElroy.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Andrea Elder-Howell & Randi Shubin Dresner LIVE on LI in the AM with Tom Schiliro! 7-8-21 by JVC Broadcasting
The beautiful thing about being in business is meeting someone who is aligned with your ideals and how you look at the world, and fortunately, I was able to find someone like that in Christian, the founder of Poseidon Paddle and Surf. From having a business relationship to becoming one of my great friends, the episode this week highlights Christian's journey as the founder of Poseidon Paddle and Surf, as a great musician, brother, son, and friend. Social Media Profiles: Website: https://www.poseidonstandup.com/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/poseidoncollective/ , https://www.instagram.com/christianshubin/ Facebook: https://web.facebook.com/PoseidonCollective/ Topics Discussed: Poseidon Paddle and Surf—how did it come to be, how is it now, where is it located? Mom being a surfer in the 50s Working with his brother Music journey—how did it start, playing in a band, performing at Whiskey a Go Go SUP Surf trip to Simeulue, Indonesia before COVID hit From being a customer to becoming a great friend Location: Santa Monica, CA --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/wavetribe/message
Podcast: The Michael Shermer Show (LS 57 · TOP 0.5% what is this?)Episode: 109. Neil Shubin — Some Assembly Required: Decoding Four Billion Years of Life, from Ancient Fossils to DNAPub date: 2020-03-24The author of the best-selling Your Inner Fish gives us a lively and accessible account of the great transformations in the history of life on Earth — a new view of the evolution of human and animal life that explains how the incredible diversity of life on our planet came to be. Over billions of years, ancient fish evolved to walk on land, reptiles transformed into birds that fly, and apelike primates evolved into humans that walk on two legs, talk, and write. For more than a century, paleontologists have traveled the globe to find fossils that show how such changes have happened. We have now arrived at a remarkable moment — prehistoric fossils coupled with new DNA technology have given us the tools to answer some of the basic questions of our existence: How do big changes in evolution happen? Is our presence on Earth the product of mere chance? This new science reveals a multibillion-year evolutionary history filled with twists and turns, trial and error, accident and invention. In Some Assembly Required, Neil Shubin takes readers on a journey of discovery spanning centuries, as explorers and scientists seek to understand the origins of life's immense diversity. Shermer and Shubin also discuss: Darwin's consilience of inductions (convergence of evidence) from multiple lines of inquiry how a scientific theory can gain acceptance without an underlying causal mechanism (evolutionary theory before DNA) what scientists should do with anomalies unexplained by the prevailing theory Does ontogeny recapitulate phylogeny? (What can we learn about evolution from embryology?) What is epigenetics, anyway? the best explanation for the origins of life how information can increase in a genome from microevolution to macroevolution: why creationists are wrong Are there hopeful monsters in evolution? Punctuated equilibrium and what it was like to be Steve Gould's TA women in science, then and now What it's like to do a paleontological dig north of the arctic circle? and Martian paleontology. Neil Shubin is the author of Some Assembly Required, Your Inner Fish, and The Universe Within. He is the Robert R. Bensley Professor of Organismal Biology and Anatomy at the University of Chicago. He was elected to the National Academy of Sciences in 2011. He lives in Chicago. Listen to Science Salon via Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google Play Music, Stitcher, iHeartRadio, and TuneIn.The podcast and artwork embedded on this page are from Michael Shermer, which is the property of its owner and not affiliated with or endorsed by Listen Notes, Inc.
I talk to legendary Consumer Care Executive and current Interim President & CEO of the Society of Consumer Affairs Professionals (SOCAP International). --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/denise-venneri/support
eSports has exploded with young people over the past 5-10 years. It's gotten so big that colleges are even offering scholarships and organized teams. Evan and I discuss how Game Gym is helping these young people manage video gaming and helping them thrive in eSports.
Back in 1998 when we first talked to Fleshlight founder Steve Shubin about his upstart little company, little did we know he would revolutionize the sex toy industry and sell untold millions of rubber vaginas the world over! And while his son Brian is runnin' the show these days....Steve is still developing new products all of the time...and now Wife/Mom Kathy has gotten in on the action developing dildos for the ladies! It truly is a multi-million dollar family business! We got Brian on the phone to discuss all of the new products in the Fleshlight line and much more!! See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
www.TheDavidAlliance.com TDAgiantslayer@gmail.com webstix.com Tony Herman - the coolest cat on the net Who might you think is the hardest to convert to Christianity? The drug addict? The religious person? The really really good person? The satanist? The gang banger? The wealthy? The person in the cult? My money is on the Muslims. Why? Well first off they intimidate many Christians. The world and the media have done a good job at that. right? They are all out to tear down america and destroy our fine country etc… look I don't know if you have any muslims in your community but they have just as many issues trying to follow their religion as anyone? It's also hard to answer their questions. They think Jesus is a prophet and I am uncertain when they challenge me. So why do Muslims come to Christ? Because if we can figure that out it will help us dramatically reach the less challenging. 5 Reasons Muslims Convert A survey of 750 Muslims who converted to Christianity shows five predominant reasons they chose to follow Christ. The lifestyle of Christians. Former Muslims cited the love that Christians exhibited in their relationships with non-Christians and their treatment of women as equals. The power of God in answered prayers and healing. Experiences of God's supernatural work—especially important to folk Muslims who have a characteristic concern for power and blessings—increased after their conversions, according to the survey. Often dreams about Jesus were reported. Dissatisfaction with the type of Islam they had experienced. Many expressed dissatisfaction with the Qur'an, emphasizing God's punishment over his love. Others cited Islamic militancy and the failure of Islamic law to transform society. The spiritual truth in the Bible. Muslims are generally taught that the Torah, Psalms, and the Gospels are from God, but that they became corrupted. These Christian converts said, however, that the truth of God found in Scripture became compelling for them and key to their understanding of God's character. Biblical teachings about the love of God. In the Qur'an, God's love is conditional, but God's love for all people was especially eye-opening for Muslims. These converts were moved by the love expressed through the life and teachings of Jesus. The next step for many Muslims was to become part of a fellowship of loving Christians. The respondents were from 30 countries and 50 ethnic groups. The survey was prepared at Fuller Theological Seminary's School of Intercultural Studies, and reported in Christianity Today. Muslims are now 21 percent of the world population, increasing from 12 percent in the past 100 years. And the growth rate of Islam is higher than that of Christianity (1.81% per year, compared to 1.23%). Christians still outnumber Muslims, with one-third of the world population naming Christianity as their faith. In some parts of the world, significant pockets of Muslims are turning to Christ, including North Africa, South Asia, and Indonesia. —info from J. Dudley Woodbury, Russell G. Shubin, and G. Marks at ChristianityToday.com. Copyright © 2008 by the author or Christianity Today International/Leadership Journal. Click here for reprint information on Leadership Journal. Winter 2008, Vol. XXIX, No. 1, Page 13
Erica loves Jesus, is passionate about speaking up for the marginalized, racial equality, orphan care, and being a good listener. She is an international travel agent, married to her high school sweetheart, mom to five awesome kids, and currently resides in Colorado. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/givinghopeministries/support
Tracklist: https://ambermuse.com/amber-muse-radio-show-191-with-denis-shubin-guest-mix-17-july-2020. More listening links: https://fanlink.to/ambermuseradio. @denisshubin mix features music released on @ambermuse @arkajo @ofparadiserecords @fjaak @delichting @eery @thebunkerny @vakant @delsinrecords @ilian-tape
This week I sit down with my friend Jenn. Jenn is currently living in Scotland while she earns her Master's degree. We talk about her mom and sister and what it was like dealing with the feelings of loosing them. Oh and one more thing, our friendship is a secret so please don't tell anyone, but do tell everyone about the podcast.Be sure to like and subscribe!
Erica Shubin is a mom of 5 chidren, three biological and two children from Ethiopia. When her black son and daughter wanted to ask neighbors about picking up some odd jobs to make extra cash, Erica hesitated to let them go, because she worried about how the world would respond to the color of their skin. Against her gut feeling she let them go, they were 9 and 11 and ended up with an officer at her door responding to a robbery in progress. This experience gave her perspective on just how pervasive racism is and how deeply it hurts lives.
Erica Shubin is a mom of 5 chidren, three biological and two children from Ethiopia. When her black son and daughter wanted to ask neighbors about picking up some odd jobs to make extra cash, Erica hesitated to let them go, because she worried about how the world would respond to the color of their skin. Against her gut feeling she let them go, they were 9 and 11 and ended up with an officer at her door responding to a robbery in progress. This experience gave her perspective on just how pervasive racism is and how deeply it hurts lives.
The author of the best-selling Your Inner Fish gives us a lively and accessible account of the great transformations in the history of life on Earth — a new view of the evolution of human and animal life that explains how the incredible diversity of life on our planet came to be. Over billions of years, ancient fish evolved to walk on land, reptiles transformed into birds that fly, and apelike primates evolved into humans that walk on two legs, talk, and write. For more than a century, paleontologists have traveled the globe to find fossils that show how such changes have happened. We have now arrived at a remarkable moment — prehistoric fossils coupled with new DNA technology have given us the tools to answer some of the basic questions of our existence: How do big changes in evolution happen? Is our presence on Earth the product of mere chance? This new science reveals a multibillion-year evolutionary history filled with twists and turns, trial and error, accident and invention. In Some Assembly Required, Neil Shubin takes readers on a journey of discovery spanning centuries, as explorers and scientists seek to understand the origins of life’s immense diversity. Shermer and Shubin also discuss: Darwin’s consilience of inductions (convergence of evidence) from multiple lines of inquiry how a scientific theory can gain acceptance without an underlying causal mechanism (evolutionary theory before DNA) what scientists should do with anomalies unexplained by the prevailing theory Does ontogeny recapitulate phylogeny? (What can we learn about evolution from embryology?) What is epigenetics, anyway? the best explanation for the origins of life how information can increase in a genome from microevolution to macroevolution: why creationists are wrong Are there hopeful monsters in evolution? Punctuated equilibrium and what it was like to be Steve Gould’s TA women in science, then and now What it’s like to do a paleontological dig north of the arctic circle? and Martian paleontology. Neil Shubin is the author of Some Assembly Required, Your Inner Fish, and The Universe Within. He is the Robert R. Bensley Professor of Organismal Biology and Anatomy at the University of Chicago. He was elected to the National Academy of Sciences in 2011. He lives in Chicago. Listen to Science Salon via Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google Play Music, Stitcher, iHeartRadio, and TuneIn.
In this week's interview, Chief Correspondent Steve Scher talks with evolutionary biologist Neil Shubin about the impact of viruses on our genetic makeup, and the hidden universes inside our DNA. Shubin unpacks the properties of viruses, and the ways they can disrupt our world while simultaneously setting the stage for evolutionary change. With examples of ancient viruses that attacked the human genome and were then repurposed, Shubin delves into the essential role that repurposing has played in our evolution and the story of life on Earth. He highlights how the dynamic nature of genetic mutation continues to confound and intrigue researchers today. Get an insider's look and stay in the know about what's going on in this moment at Town Hall Seattle. Widespread event cancellations due to COVID-19 have put a strain on nonprofits throughout our community, including Town Hall. We hope you'll consider supporting us during this difficult time by making a donation or becoming a member. Help us keep producing In The Moment—along with even more digital-first content!
In this week's interview, Chief Correspondent Steve Scher talks with evolutionary biologist Neil Shubin about the impact of viruses on our genetic makeup, and the hidden universes inside our DNA. Shubin unpacks the properties of viruses, and the ways they can disrupt our world while simultaneously setting the stage for evolutionary change. With examples of ancient viruses that attacked the human genome and were then repurposed, Shubin delves into the essential role that repurposing has played in our evolution and the story of life on Earth. He highlights how the dynamic nature of genetic mutation continues to confound and intrigue researchers today. Get an insider's look and stay in the know about what's going on in this moment at Town Hall Seattle. Widespread event cancellations due to COVID-19 have put a strain on nonprofits throughout our community, including Town Hall. We hope you'll consider supporting us during this difficult time by making a donation or becoming a member. Help us keep producing In The Moment—along with even more digital-first content!
In this episode, Misha Kaura interviews Alexis Shubin, a design marketing expert based out of Long Beach, California. Alexis is an alumna of the University of Arizona and began her career as a fashion assistant at Harper’s Bazaar before moving on to senior marketing positions at multiple companies including the infamous Kaufmann Mercantile. As a marketing creative professional with sharp business acumen, she has built a strong portfolio of companies and has proven herself to be a leader in the field.
Flute 360 | Episode 87: “Dalcroze Eurhythmics and Integrative Education with Emma Shubin” (54:11) In today’s episode, Heidi talks with Emma Shubin about the Dalcroze method and integrative studies. The ladies talk about how incorporating movement, within our performances, can help our musical intentions to be more free and expressive through the flute. Check out today’s episode for more details! Episode 87 – Main Points: 1:02 – Gold Sponsor: J&K Productions 1:55 – Welcome! 2:53 – Heidi: Please share with the listeners who you are and your musical background! 3:02 – Emma’s Answer 5:45 – Heidi: Reference to Series 17 with Mr. Robert Dick (Episodes 79-82) 6:20 – Emma talks about how the body is our first instrument. 8:52 – Question: What drew you to the Dalcroze method? What led you to become a certified and licensed Dalcroze teacher? 9:12 – Emma’s Answer 12:37 – Heidi summarizes Emma’s gold nuggets, thus far. Listen here! 14:22 – Heidi Comments 15:08 – “Music happens in the present time!” – Emma 15:38 – Lisa Parker, educator 18:03 – Question: What is the Dalcroze methodology? 18:30 – Emma’s Answer 22:56 – Question: If someone was interested in pursuing a Dalcroze certification and, or licensure what are the differences between the two? 23:08 – Emma’s Answer 28:54 – Heidi Comments 33:11 – Topic: Education 35:58 – Question: Do you integrate the Dalcroze method in every private flute lesson with your students? 36:10 – Emma’s Answer 41:36 – Heidi: Reference to Episode 74 (Interview with Ai Goldsmith at 13:53)! 42:25 – Emma Comments 44:07 – “We are a really small community (as it were), yet, we are apart of a large community of music-makers. To me, every person is a musician whether they are an instrumentalist or not. Music is something that we carry with us whether it’s for celebration or mourning or apart of our day. I couldn’t imagine my day without music.” – Emma 46:16 – Question: As a flute community, what can we do to help your non-profit organization, Integral Steps? 46:25 – Emma’s Answer 47:25 – Play It Forward – Scholarship Program, Dr. Jessica Sherer 50:15 – Contact Emma Shubin! 52:36 – Bronze Sponsor: KinderFlute with Kathy Blocki Episode 87 – Resources Mentioned: Flute 360 – Dr. Heidi Kay Begay’s Website Financially Support Flute 360! Emma’s Website Emma’s YouTube Channel Integral Steps’ Website Integral Steps’ Facebook Page Dalcroze’s Website Play It Forward – Scholarship Program, Dr. Jessica Sherer Lisa Parker, educator Flute 360’s Episode 74 Flute 360’s Episodes 79-82 Episode 87 – Sponsors: Gold & Silver: J&K Productions Bronze: KinderFlute with Kathy Blocki
Neil Shubin researches the evolutionary origin of anatomical features. Dr. Shubin's most recent discovery, Tiktaalik roseae, has been dubbed the "missing link" between fish and land animals. Dr. Shubin discusses Tiktaalik and the evolutionary shift from life in water to life on land.
One of palaeontology‘s great themes of questioning is the rise of novelty: how new structures and functions arise in specific lineages. In this episode we speak with Neil Shubin, Professor of Organismal Biology at the University of Chicago, who has been studying novelty in the context of the vertebrate transition from water to land. Neil studies the fossil record of early tetrapods, the first vertebrates with limbs, to understand what changes underpinned this great transition. The other half his lab uses molecular techniques on living organisms to see how changes to the development of appendages (and their underlying genetic architecture) effected the shift from a fin to a limb. In this interview, we hear about his fieldwork in the Arctic and Antarctic, how palaeontologists decide where to look for key fossils, why development matters, and about his deep involvement in science communication.
Can you be your own mum? Does asexuality exist? We answer these questions and more in this episode! This week Corry touches on the history of cloning, and explains why Jurassic Park is indisputably the best film. References and Further Reading 1. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/m/pubmed/29395327/ 2. http://www.history.com/.amp/news/wooly-mammoth-resurrection-cloning-genesis 3. Shubin, Neil (24 February 2008) Birds Do It. Bees Do It. Dragons Don’t Need To New York Times 4. "Cloning Fact Sheet". Human Genome Project Information. 5. Swedin, Eric. "Cloning". CredoReference. Science in the Contemporary World 6. Rantala, Milgram, M., Arthur (1999). Cloning: For and Against. Chicago, Illinois: Carus Publishing Company. 7. Wakayama S, Kohda T, Obokata H, Tokoro M, Li C, Terashita Y, Mizutani E, Nguyen VT, Kishigami S, Ishino F, Wakayama T (7 March 2013). "Successful serial recloning in the mouse over multiple generations". Cell Stem Cell 8. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_animals_that_have_been_cloned 9. https://www.newscientist.com/article/dn4026-worlds-first-cloned-horse-is-born/ 10. Westhusin, Mark; Lyons, Leslie; Murphy, Keith; Buck, Sandra; Lisa Howe; Rugila, James; Liu, Ling; Pryor, Jane; Kraemer, Duane (February 2002). "Cell biology: A cat cloned by nuclear transplantation" 11. Pet kitten cloned for Christmas". BBC. 23 December 2004. Support us on Patreon: http://patreon.com/SciGuys Watch us on YouTube: http://youtube.com/SciGuys Follow the Sci Guys @notcorry / @jampkin / @lukecutforth
Amber Muse’s own Taran & Lomov continue the musical year with their second EP in 2019. “Aerobic” EP contains three productions that have been tried and tested in the past months. As always, this is music at the intersection of genres: techy, deep, melodic, and something you will want to dance to. The opening track “Aerobic” is a dance floor mover; “Migla” (for mist in Latvian) comes in two versions – edit and extended with otherworldly synth. Denis Shubin from St. Petersburg whose EP came out on the label in January is on remix duties here. He put the dubby and bassy “Dubman” on rarefied drums and added some spacey layers for a trippy experience. Support comes from Shur-i-kan, Laurent Garnier, Jamie Jones, James Zabiela, Just Her, Mr. V, Sosa, Franco Bianco, Ibiza Global Radio and more. www.facebook.com/taranlomov www.soundcloud.com/bogdan-taran www.residentadvisor.net/dj/taranlomov www.facebook.com/ambermuserec Written and produced by Taran & Lomov. Mixdown: Z Studio (Riga). (c) & (p) 2019 Amber Muse Records.
Amber Muse Radio Show #119 featuring @denisshubin own music productions and remixes // 24 Jan 2019. Tracklist: https://ambermuse.com/amber-muse-radio-show-119-denis-shubin-music-special-24-jan-2019. Denis Shubin – Intro Denis Shubin – HouseMyHouse (Amber Muse) Denis Shubin – Slowmo (Amber Muse) Denis Shubin – Unreleased Denis Shubin – Hsjn (Amber Muse) Denis Shubin – Unreleased Denis Shubin – Dreampad (Amber Muse) Taran & Lomov – Hoax (Shmix Remix) (Amber Muse) Denis Shubin – Can’t Control (Extended Mix) (Plant 74) Denis Shubin – Unreleased Dazz Band – Let It Whip (Denis Shubin Edit) (Free Download) Denis Shubin – Unreleased Dubby Denis Shubin – Unreleased Denis Shubin – Interlude Denis Shubin – Unreleased Denis Shubin – Outro
Denis Shubin - DISTRICT Podcast Vol. 53 by District Podcast
Evolutionary biologist Neil Shubin spent six years in the Arctic searching for a fossil that could be a missing link between sea and land animals. In 2004, Shubin discovered Tiktaalik roseae, a 375-million-year old creature that was part fish, part land-living animal. On this episode of Big Brains, Shubin shares the story behind his discovery of Tiktaalik, what it has meant for the understanding of human evolution, and how it has impacted the future of genetic research. Subscribe to Big Brains on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher, and Google Play, and learn more at news.uchicago.edu.
This throwback podcast from the Warrior Poet days, remains one of the best podcasts I have ever done. Steve Shubin, ex SWAT officer and successful entrepreneur, opens up about one of the most hilarious and profound Ayahuasca experiences ever captured on air.
This Official Star Citizen Content (and any associate marks) are the property of Cloud Imperium Games Corp. and Roberts Space Industries Corp (“RSI”). All rights in content, including places, characters, concepts, and ships produced and created by RSI relating to said marks and properties belong to RSI. Music: - Last Stand (http://www.purple-planet.com/) - Determination (http://www.purple-planet.com/) - Laterz (Wesley Pipkin) Voice Actors: Narration = Captain Bayne Gavin Arlington (CEO) = STLYoungblood https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCx8fzdrJcPQLY7luxo-2Mkg Asura-ing Clean Water = Alysianah Noire https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCq5UB9mFw8C8-VPbCx2Y2pQ Corporate Office Upgrades = Ryan (AKA Mac: SuperMacBrother) https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCmKLlnlZn3dBFu2UdKxhTXQ Anonymous Tip Line = Vaedrin Mallack https://www.twitch.tv/station_42 Available Platforms: - iTunes = https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/sclorecasts-podcast/id1125578222 - Google Play = https://play.google.com/music/listen?u=1#/ps/I6vxlgf4godpwnrmxgxgbjs3bte - Stitcher = https://www.stitcher.com/podcast/sclorecast - blogspot = https://sclorecast.blogspot.com/ - SoundCloud = https://soundcloud.com/sclorecast - YouTube = https://www.youtube.com/c/sclorecast - iHeartRadio = https://www.iheart.com/show/263-sclorecasts-podcast Support SCLC: - Patreon = https://www.patreon.com/SCLoreCast Official Site: - SCLoreCast = https://sclorecast.com
Hosts: Nels Elde and Vincent Racaniello Nels and Vincent launch a new podcast on evolution, and start by discussing how the field has changed through recent mergers of evolutionary and experimental biology in the post-genome era. Links for this episode Elde Laboratory Nels on TWiV 234 Mechanistic approaches to the study of evolution (Nat Rev Gen) Australian sheep blowfly (Wikipedia) Hopi Hoekstra Science Picks Nels - Your inner fish (video stream, Shubin website)Vincent - Prelude to Foundation by Isaac Asimov Music on TWiEVO is performed by Trampled by Turtles Send your virology questions and comments to twievo@microbe.tv
This might very well be the best podcast I have ever done. Steve Shubin, ex SWAT officer and successful entrepreneur, opens up about one of the most hilarious and profoundly transformative Ayahuasca experiences ever captured on air. If you have ever considered listening to a podcast, I would consider listening to this one!
Wimbledon semi-finalist, world traveler, my mother, Kathy Shubin (born Kathy Harter) sits down for a chat with me about the lessons from a life well lived, and her recent trip down to the Spiritquest Sanctuary to experience the sacraments of Ayahuasca, Huachuma, and Vilka.
Welcome to Alzheimer's Speaks Radio where we listen to all voices on dementia. Our first guest Jane Sweeney, used a pen name of JC to write "Caregiver: My Love Story, Facing Dementia." This is a powerful and very "caregiver friendly" book. The book is her tribute to her sweetheart Bernie, to honor his love. Jane wanted and needed to share what she learned. By giving to others tips she learned from her own journey, Jane hopes to bring awareness to the difficulties faced by so many walking this path. Website Email Our second guest will be Dr. Shubin is active in research for dementia. As the Director and Principal Investigator of Neuro-Therapeutics, Inc., he provides opportunities for those diagnosed to be involved in cutting edge research in neurology. Today, he will talk to use about a phase 3 clinical study. The trial involves LMTX, a Tau protein aggregation inhibitor for patients with early Alzheimers. LMTX™ acts by reducing levels of aggregated or misfolded Tau proteins, which are associated with the progressive neurodegeneration of Alzheimer's disease. For more information contact Keeley Fernandez, Study Coordinator by Email (626)250-2070 ex 730 Check out Alzheimer's Speaks Website for more resources and information - Blog, Free Webinars, Tools, Resource Directory and more.Support this Show: https://alzheimersspeaks.com/donate-now/See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Jesus is the name of Rudy's dog--Rudy being the boy who forms a frank but subtle friendship with the narrator of Erica Shubin's story "When Jesus Died". Shubin's is a rich and detailed narrative encompassing adolescent sexuality, religion, and community, and centering on the poignant makeshift burial of a pet. Most of all, though, "When Jesus Died" explores the question of what makes us feel invincible or whole and what we do to guard against diminution.
This week Lab Out Loud welcomes Neil Shubin to the show. As paleontologist and anatomy professor at the University of Chicago, Shubin has had some fantastic opportunities to hunt for fossils and use them to communicate stories of our own evolution. In 2008, he wrote these stories into Your Inner Fish – a national bestselling book that has now been adapted into a three-part series on PBS. With contagious enthusiasm, Shubin talks to co-hosts Brian Bartel and Dale Basler about his experiences as a scientist, teacher, and in communicating science. Show notes at: http://laboutloud.com/?p=2764
We all know the Darwin fish, the clever car-bumper parody of the Christian "ichthys" symbol, or Jesus fish. Unlike the Christian symbol, the Darwin fish has, you know, legs. Har har.But the Darwin fish isn't merely a clever joke; in effect, it contains a testable scientific prediction. If evolution is true, and if life on Earth originated in the oceans, then there must have once been fish species possessing primitive limbs, which enabled them to spend some part of their lives on land. And these species, in turn, must be the ancestors of four-limbed, land-living vertebrates like us.Sure enough, in 2006, scientists found one of those transitional species: Tiktaalik roseae, a 375 million-year-old Devonian period specimen discovered in the Canadian Arctic by paleontologist Neil Shubin and his colleagues. Tiktaalik, explains Shubin this week’s episode, is an "anatomical mix between fish and a land-living animal.""It has a neck," says Shubin, a professor at the University of Chicago. "No fish has a neck. And you know what? When you look inside the fin, and you take off those fin rays, you find an upper arm bone, a forearm, and a wrist." Tiktaalik, Shubin has observed, was a fish capable of doing a push-up. It had both lungs and gills. It's quite the missing link.On the show this week, we talk to Shubin about Tiktaalik, his bestselling book about the discovery, Your Inner Fish: A Journey Into the 3.5 Billion Year History of the Human Body, and the recently premiered three-part PBS series adaptation of the book, featuring Shubin as host who romps from Pennsylvania roadsides to the melting Arctic in search of fossils that elucidate the natural history of our own anatomy.This episode also features a discussion of the growing possibility of an El Nino developing later this year, and the bizarre viral myth about animals fleeing Yellowstone Park because of an impending supervolcano eruption.iTunes: itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/inquiring-minds/id711675943RSS: feeds.feedburner.com/inquiring-mindsStitcher: stitcher.com/podcast/inquiring-minds
After a brief hiatus, the Gettin’ Close podcast returns! The guest this time around is stand-up comedian and author, Michael “F’n” Rainey. I first met Mike in the basement of the Shubin theater where him and his buddy, Tim Butterly, were doing bits in these horrible (being great) delco/northeast Philly Read more…
The Universe Within (starts at 4:40) Within each and every one of us is the history of life on this planet, the planet itself and the entire universe. This is the theme of a new book “The Universe Within.” The author, Neil Shubin, is a professor of Paleontology and Evolutionary Biology at the University of Chicago. Starting with what physically constitutes a human being and what makes a human life possible, Shubin surveys many domains of science to find out what we can learn about what’s out there from what’s inside of us. It’s a fantastically broad scope, bringing together the common history of Rocks, Planets and People. As professor Shubin explains to How On Earth’s Chip Grandits, it is the very concept of this common history that binds all of these topics, which are normally found scattered throughout disparate domains of science and academia. De-Extinction (starts at 14:15) You may think that when a species dies, it's gone forever. But with enough motivation, scientists might be able to return some species to life. Popular science writer Carl Zimmer has written about "de-extinction" in the cover story of April's issue of National Geographic magazine. So, is the movie Jurassic Park a good primer on de-extinction? Hosts: Susan Moran, Jim Pullen Producer: Susan Moran Engineer: Jim Pullen Executive Producer: Shelley Schlender Listen to the show:
Neil Shubin researches the evolutionary origin of anatomical features. Dr. Shubin's most recent discovery, Tiktaalik roseae, has been dubbed the "missing link" between fish and land animals. Dr. Shubin discusses Tiktaalik and the evolutionary shift from life in water to life on land.
Neil Shubin is a distinguished paleontologist whose research seeks to understand the mechanics behind the evolutionary origin of anatomical features of animals. His work focuses mainly on the Devonian and Triassic periods to understand the pivotal ecological and evolutionary shifts that occurred during that time. In 2004, after scouring the Canadian Artic for six years, Shubin and his team unearthed the Tiktaalik roseae, a fossil “fishapod,” which, despite its fish-like features, had a neck, skull, ribs, and parts of limbs similar to land animals. This discovery represents the transition between fish and four-legged mammals that occurred over 350 million years ago. Hitchcock Lecture description: Evolutionary biology is a science that allows us to make predictions, about fossils in the geological record and the activity of different genes in different kinds of creatures. In his first lecture, Professor Shubin will discuss how this type of approach helps us to understand some of the great transformations in the history of life. His second lecture will ask the question “How do new organs arise in the history of life?” New technologies allow us to look at this and other classic questions in biology.
Neil Shubin is a distinguished paleontologist whose research seeks to understand the mechanics behind the evolutionary origin of anatomical features of animals. His work focuses mainly on the Devonian and Triassic periods to understand the pivotal ecological and evolutionary shifts that occurred during that time. In 2004, after scouring the Canadian Artic for six years, Shubin and his team unearthed the Tiktaalik roseae, a fossil “fishapod,” which, despite its fish-like features, had a neck, skull, ribs, and parts of limbs similar to land animals. This discovery represents the transition between fish and four-legged mammals that occurred over 350 million years ago. Hitchcock Lecture description: Evolutionary biology is a science that allows us to make predictions, about fossils in the geological record and the activity of different genes in different kinds of creatures. In his first lecture, Professor Shubin will discuss how this type of approach helps us to understand some of the great transformations in the history of life. His second lecture will ask the question “How do new organs arise in the history of life?” New technologies allow us to look at this and other classic questions in biology.