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Lottie Peppers

'Animated Life: The Living Fossil Fish' - The New York Times - 0 views

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    But then on Dec. 22, 1938, Marjorie Courtenay-Latimer came across a strange blue fin poking out of a pile of fish that struck her as extraordinary. With its fleshy, lobed fins and its tough armored scales, the specimen looked very unlike fish we see in our oceans today. That is because the coelacanth has managed to survive in roughly its current form for hundreds of millions of years. In the course of researching this film, we learned all kinds of amazing facts about the coelacanth. For instance, unlike most fish, they give birth to live young. They produce eggs the size of grapefruits, which then hatch internally. From video footage taken by the explorer Hans Fricke - which we used as inspiration for our sets and puppets - we know coelacanths are prone to some odd behavior. They've been spotted doing headstands underwater.
Lottie Peppers

Animated Life: The Living Fossil Fish | HHMI BioInteractive Video - YouTube - 0 views

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    This animated short film tells the engaging tale of the discovery of the coelacanth. In 1938, South African museum curator Marjorie Courtenay-Latimer came across a strange blue fin poking out of a pile of fish. With its fleshy, lobed fins and its tough armored scales, the coelacanth did not look like any other fish that exists today. The coelacanth belongs to a lineage that has remained virtually unchanged for hundreds of millions of years-earning it the description of a "living fossil."
Lottie Peppers

Ancient fossil may rewrite fish family tree | Science/AAAS | News - 0 views

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    When it comes to charting the tree of life, the most important difference between humans and sharks isn't limbs versus fins or even lungs versus gills. It all comes down to our skeletons. Sharks' skeletons are made of cartilage, placing them along with rays and skates in a group of jawed vertebrates called cartilaginous fish. Humans-along with most other living vertebrates-belong to the same group as bony fish, whose skeletons are made of bone. Scientists knew that these groups diverged more than 420 million years ago, but what the last common ancestor looked like remained a mystery. Now, new discoveries inside the head of a small fossil fish from Siberia may provide some clues.
Lottie Peppers

Human Ancestor Went out on a Limb - 0 views

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    2 minute animation, (includes full body animation rendition of Australopithicus) A recent study of fossil shoulder bones from a human ancestor reveals that this ancient relative was still well adapted to living in trees, even after the evolution of bipedalism. Studying features like these helps scientists to better understand when modern humans moved away from a partly arboreal lifestyle and transitioned to living exclusively on the ground.
Lottie Peppers

Evolution: Library: Whale Evolution - 1 views

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    5 minute video: The evolution of whales has been a mystery. How did a large, big-brained mammal -- air-breathing, warm-blooded, giving birth to live young -- come to live entirely in water, when mammals evolved on land?
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