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  • Nicolas Steno is rarely heard of

  • outside Intro to Geology,

  • but anyone hoping to understand life on Earth

  • should see how Steno expanded and connected

  • those very concepts:

  • Earth, life, and understanding.

  • Born Niels Stensen in 1638 Denmark,

  • son of a goldsmith,

  • he was a sickly kid

  • whose school chums died of plague.

  • He survived to cut up corpses

  • as an anatomist,

  • studying organs shared across species.

  • He found a duct in animal skulls

  • that sends saliva to the mouth.

  • He refuted Descartes' idea

  • that only humans had a pineal gland,

  • proving it wasn't the seat of the soul,

  • arguably, the debut of neuroscience.

  • Most remarkable for the time was his method.

  • Steno never let ancient texts,

  • Aristotelian metaphysics,

  • or Cartesian deductions

  • overrule empirical, experimental evidence.

  • His vision, uncluttered by speculation or rationalization,

  • went deep.

  • Steno had seen how gallstones

  • form in wet organs by accretion.

  • They obeyed molding principles

  • he knew from the goldsmith trade,

  • rules useful across disciplines

  • for understanding solids

  • by their structural relationships.

  • Later, the Grand Duke of Tuscany

  • had him dissect a shark.

  • Its teeth resembled tongue stones,

  • odd rocks seen inside other rocks

  • in Malta and the mountains near Florence.

  • Pliny the Elder, old Roman naturalist,

  • said these fell from the sky.

  • In the Dark Ages,

  • folks said they were snake tongues,

  • petrified by Saint Paul.

  • Steno saw that tongue stones were shark teeth

  • and vice versa,

  • with the same signs of structural growth.

  • Figuring similar things are made in similar ways,

  • he argued the ancient teeth

  • came from ancient sharks

  • in waters that formed rock around the teeth

  • and became mountains.

  • Rock layers were once layers of watery sediment,

  • which would lay out horizontally,

  • one atop another,

  • oldest up to newest.

  • If layers were deformed,

  • tilted,

  • cut by a fault or a canyon,

  • that change came after the layer formed.

  • Sounds simple today;

  • back then, revolutionary.

  • He'd invented stratigraphy

  • and laid geology's ground work.

  • By finding one origin for shark teeth from two eras

  • by stating natural laws ruling the present

  • also ruled the past,

  • Steno planted seeds for uniformitarianism,

  • the idea that the past was shaped by processes

  • observable today.

  • In the 18th and 19th centuries,

  • English uniformitarian geologists,

  • James Hutton and Charles Lyell,

  • studied current, very slow rates

  • of erosion and sedimentation

  • and realized the Earth had to be way older

  • than the biblical guestimate, 6000 years.

  • Out of their work came the rock cycle,

  • which combined with plate tectonics

  • in the mid-twentieth century

  • to give us the great molten-crusting, quaking,

  • all-encircling theory of the Earth,

  • from a gallstone to a 4.5 billion-year-old planet.

  • Now think bigger,

  • take it to biology.

  • Say you see shark teeth in one layer

  • and a fossil of an organism

  • you've never seen under that.

  • The deeper fossil's older, yes?

  • You now have evidence

  • of the origin and extinction of species over time.

  • Get uniformitarian.

  • Maybe a process still active today

  • caused changes not just in rocks but in life.

  • It might also explain similarities and differences

  • between species

  • found by anatomists like Steno.

  • It's a lot to ponder,

  • but Charles Darwin had the time

  • on a long trip to the Galapagos,

  • reading a copy of his friend Charles Lyell's

  • "Principles of Geology,"

  • which Steno sort of founded.

  • Sometimes giants stand on the shoulders

  • of curious little people.

  • Nicolas Steno helped evolve evolution,

  • broke ground for geology,

  • and showed how unbiased, empirical observation

  • can cut across intellectual borders

  • to deepen our perspective.

  • His finest accomplishment, though,

  • may be his maxim,

  • casting the search for truth

  • beyond our senses and our current understanding

  • as the pursuit of the beauty

  • of the as yet unknown.

  • Beautiful is what we see,

  • more beautiful is what we know,

  • most beautiful, by far, is what we don't.

Nicolas Steno is rarely heard of

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TED-ED】あなたの知らない最も画期的な科学者-アディソン・アンダーソン (【TED-Ed】The most groundbreaking scientist you've never heard of - Addison Anderson)

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    稲葉白兎 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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