Children of Prometheus: The Accelerating Pace of Human Evolution by Christopher Wills. Slightly dated book (1998) arguing that human evolution is speeding up.
He finds a bit of evidence to support the claim, pointing at the differences in adaptation to altitude amongst people in the Andes and the Himalayas (the Sherpas seem better adapted). He also points out that the sickle-cell anaemia and malaria thing suggests that its a recent adaptation, being so harmful for such slight protection. He fingers the change from hunter-gatherer to agriculture as part of the culprit, the latter lifestyle leading to many more mosquito-breeding pools and puddles.
Not totally convincing though, and he points out that most of the evolution is boring differential selection between existing alleles, not exciting new mutations.
Found a couple of things interesting. Trivial things like skin pigmentation changes seem to evolve very quickly: if a population find themselves at a latitude without much sunshine, it can happen pretty quickly that the enzyme tyrosinase which produces melanin mutates enough to reduce its functioning.
He points out that people of 400,000 years ago were thought to be primitive based on their crude stone tools, but once wooden spears were uncovered they were found to be pretty sophisticated, with the centre of mass a third of the way from the point, just like a modern javelin. The Sima de los Huesos people were interesting too.
He also recounts an non-human incident from a researcher called Gage who was trying to compare the behaviour of lab mice with a strain of wild mice. One of the standard experiments was to get them to swim through a maze to a raised platform. The lab mice made it fine, but when the wild-strain mice made to the platform they managed to leap straight to the floor and make an escape attempt. Also when it came to maze-learning: the lab mice tended to explore and learn, but the wild-strain mice just went to sleep as soon as they found there was no food around. He speculates that lab mice have evolved to solve mazes.
Overall, a fairly interesting book but not unmissable.
Listening
Finished the audiobook of
Something Rotten by
Jasper Fforde. Fourth in the metafictional Thursday Next series,
where the eponymous protagonist wanders in and out of books
as part of the Jurisfiction police.
Haven't read the others, but didn't find it too hard to catch up. This one is mostly set in the apparently real world, though Hamlet, Mrs Tiggywinkle and a few other characters turn up. The "real" world is some kind of parallel universe: there's no UK, croquet is the English national sport, gravitubes and airships replace aeroplanes, and George Formby is president.
Pretty good: fast placed with an eventful plot. Somewhat amusing: might work better in print. Found it slightly annoying the way Next keeps giving little summaries of all the wacky things that are going on, as if to rub your face in how wacky everything is. Still, the excruciatingly punful names make up for things, and there's a huge amount of invention here. Also comes to a surprisingly touching ending.
Will keep an eye out for the others: good fun, nice read.
Also narrator Emily Gray does an astonishing job with a huge variety of character voices: one of the best I've heard.
Coming Soon
Next up on Listening is Teaching Company course
Origins
of Great Ancient Civilizations.
Might look for more audiobooks after that: now that Ealing Central
Library is open again there's a bit more choice.
Also working on the next Rebus.
Web
Bat vs. frog vs bat.
217 Babel Street (intro) is an evolving interactive fiction thing whose contributors include Jeff Noon. Looks pretty sparse so far but may grow. Not sure if it will be the next 253.
This made me want to hit someone has hard as I can. Tyler Durden's Rules of Innovation: how Fight Club can motivate you to become a better capitalist.
Bailout Web
Well, it's over now. Hopefully the Mandy Distraction will prove
sufficient and Brown won't feel the need to copy it over here.
El Reg: Your democracy is hurting my consensus.
Mankiw: Wanted: A Good Bernanke Speech.
Marginal Revolution: The bailout consensus is clear.
Incidental Note
I did actually know that do an end run around was not from baseball. Hirez.
| < Mexico holiday summary. | Public Servants and the Free Market > |

