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The Platypus is stranger than you think.

Platypuses have no nipples.  After the young hatch, the mother oozes milk from the pores all over her body.

The male platypus has a poison barb on the inside of its hind legs.  The purpose of this weapon is uncertain.

While often compared to the beaver, the platypus is only about 20 inches in length -- more comparable to the size of the muskrat.

The Platypus bill is actually just an elongated muzzle covered with much the same kind of tough skin found on a dog's nose.  This bill contains an electrically-sensitive organ that can detect the electrical signatures of the small aquatic animals it eats.

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Author Topic: Ernst Mayr Dies  (Read 525 times)

Offline yale

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Ernst Mayr Dies
« on: February 04, 2005, 01:27:46 PM »
Acclaimed Evolutionary Biologist Ernst Mayr Dies   :\'(

Fri Feb 4,11:48 AM ET   Science - Reuters

CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (Reuters) - Ernst Mayr, a Harvard University evolutionary biologist called "the Darwin of the 20th century," has died, the school said Friday. He was 100.


A member of the Harvard faculty for more than half a century, Mayr was considered the world's most eminent evolutionary biologist. He almost single-handedly made the origin of species diversity the central question of evolutionary biology that it is today, Harvard said.

In an interview with The Boston Globe before his 100th birthday last year, Mayr said he always had "tremendous curiosity" and balked at suggestions he stop working.

"People say to me, Why don't you retire?' I say, 'My God, why should I retire? I enjoy what I'm doing,"' he told the Globe.

Through his travels in New Guinea and the Solomon Islands, Mayr showed what Darwin had never quite established: that new species arise from isolated populations.

Mayr's death came amid renewed debate in the United States over the teaching of evolution. One Pennsylvania school district recently became the first in the country to begin teaching "intelligent design" -- an alternative to evolution that contends nature was created by an all-powerful being.

Born in 1904 in Kempten, Germany, Mayr earned a medical degree from the University of Greifswald in 1925. Descended from generations of doctors, he broke off his medical career and turned his attention to zoology, earning a doctorate from the University of Berlin just 16 months later.

"I was curious about far places," he told the Harvard Alumni Bulletin in 1961, "and decided that as an M.D., I should have but small chance of traveling."

He got the chance to do just that in 1927, when he met Lord Rothschild at a zoological convention in Budapest, Hungary. Rothschild had been looking for someone to travel to New Guinea to collect birds of paradise.

Mayr died Thursday at a retirement community outside of Boston after a short illness, Harvard said. He is survived by two daughters, five grandchildren, and 10 great-grandchildren.

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One of the last interviews with a Giant of science:

http://www.sciam.com/print_version.cfm?articleID=0004D8E1-178C-10EB-978C83414B7F012C
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« Last Edit: February 04, 2005, 01:33:48 PM by yale »
The last train out of any station will not be full of nice guys
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