Tuesday: Hili dialogue, farm rush hour and some antipodean tweets

November 12, 2019 • 3:54 am

by Matthew Cobb

A quick post today as I have to dash off to sort out getting some flooring laid in a bedroom.

In Poland, Hili is uncertain. Except she knows there was something.

A: What was there?
Hili: A bird, a mammal, or something else.

Ja: Co tam było?
Hili: Ptak albo ssak, albo coś innego.
.
At Marsh farm, it’s a real rush for the fowl, although Cuthbert is a bit late:

If you don’t know, things are grim in Oz:
If you didn’t know, the back feet of echidnas face backwards:

 

And with that, I’m off to the flooring shop and thence to university, where I will be lecturing the first year on “What is an animal?” Chip in with your definitions below!

29 thoughts on “Tuesday: Hili dialogue, farm rush hour and some antipodean tweets

  1. Animalia: I WikiLooked it up & I see that animals are all multicellular, motile [all or part of life cycle] eukaryotes, thus single-celled ‘protists’ are excluded which confuses me! Protists are eukaryotic organisms that are, by definition, not animal, plant, or fungus, but they’re not a natural group. There are [I think] protists that fulfil the criteria for being animals except they’re single celled…

    I will have to investigate further

    1. The phylogenetic tree of eukaryotes are almost entirely what are traditionally called protists. Among these are several groups with multicellular members.
      Animals and plants and fungi are but twigs in this tree. So if one wants to use the term ‘protist’ as an official taxonomic term, then the entire eukaryote tree is a tree of protists, and animals, plants and fungi are also protists.
      The sister taxon to the animal twig are protists called choanoflagellates.

  2. Madchester Matt:

    “If you didn’t know, the back feet of echidnas face backwards”

    I looked up display skeleton photos of echidna [spiny anteater] & there’s a very wide interpretation of how the back foot should be constructed – see two examples below & there’s many others that lie on a spectrum between the two. I wonder if this is poor scholarship, different species or perhaps young echidnas have ‘normal’ rear feet that fold under with maturity?

    The Wiki merelt says their hind limb claws are elongated and curve under & backwards for digging, implying the bones are normal-facing.

    Icouldn’t find really clear photos of the rear feet of living specimens, but the fuzzy ones I’ve looked at look as if the whole foot is folded under in some cases & not in others…

    https://flic.kr/p/2hJHGJf

    I have come across the same problem a few times with museum skeletons – the many copies of the Lucy skeleton are particularly bad. Leaves the door ajar for the creatards.

    1. “I couldn’t find really clear photos of the rear feet of living specimens, but the fuzzy ones I’ve looked at look as if the whole foot is folded under in some cases & not in others…”

      I think you’re right. Echidnas seem to have slightly abducted but forward facing knees and could knuckle-walk on hindpaws or not.

      Nice epipubic bones in the first specimen 🙂

      “Leaves the door ajar for the creatards”

      Do you think creationists could have a good look at the echidna? I doubt it because monotremes are a clear case of “transitional forms” that should not exist according to creationists. For example, their pectoral girdle shows two (pairs of) coracoid bones in addition to the scapula, a reptilian trait. In other mammals (marsupials and placentals), there is only the scapula because the coracoid primordia fuse with other bones early during development.

      1. Thanks DD, knuckle walking makes the most sense.

        Re. creationists – anything is possible since they will light on one small discrepancy, error, change of consensus etc & use it to grandly sweep the whole edifice off the table & under the carpet.

  3. JAC mentioned the below ceremony the other day & now there’s a Hurtigruten video up: “Hurtigruten’s hybrid powered expedition cruise ship MS Roald Amundsen has once again made history – as the first ship ever named in Antarctica.”

    https://youtu.be/f128IWA0czw

    MS Roald Amundsen is currently tied up at Punta Arenas to take on new passengers & start a new cruise. According to the map there should be the Chilean cruise ship MS Ventus Australis, tied up in view behind ‘our’ ship & yet it’s not in the photograph. I suppose the photo is earlier today & the map is current[ish].

    CLICK TO ENLARGE

    https://flic.kr/p/2hJKuAu

      1. I see now that you’re right. I saw that lurking thing, but thought it too low down & not a passenger ship [thus not showing on the cruise liner map], but now that I actually check I see the Ventus has less decks & accommodates only 200 passengers.

  4. Sub

    Animals are not plants, fungi, bacteria, archaea, …. think that’s it. Also has to be alive. I think.

  5. Dear Prof Jerry,
    This is OT:
    Back in 2015 you excoriated Karen Armstrong. Rightly so!
    Could you have another go? Nicholas Kristof has just written a fawning review over at the Times, slavering over her “magisterial” new book “The Lost Art of Scripture”.
    Link:
    https://www.nytimes.com/2019/11/11/books/review/the-lost-art-of-scripture-karen-armstrong.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share

    I sometimes like Kristof. Sometimes he drives me mad.…

    Regards from a restive Hong Kong.
    Peter F.

    1. Poor Karen. Of course scriptures are metaphorical and fictional. The problem is, getting the religious to understand that.

      1. Poor Karen recently won $100k off TED & has scored further moolah in a handful of similar prizes. She is a post-Christian Christian who has described notions of the afterlife as a red herring & she can’t really be pinned down on what “God” is, though I gather she doesn’t think it’s a being as such. Her strategy is rather brilliant as she churns out books about compassion & her desire that the various religions & quasi-religions should unify their moral message. It’s dull, unevidenced wish thinking with furry bunny rabbits loved by all sorts of interest groups [political & religious & both] for their own non-fluffy reasons.

        I looked up a Salon interview of hers & found this little pearl:

        “…some of these people — not all, by any means — seem to be secular fundamentalists. They have as bigoted a view of religion as some religious fundamentalists have of secularism. We have too much dogmatism at the moment. Take Richard Dawkins, for example. He did a couple of religious programs that I was fortunate enough to miss. It was a very, very one-sided view.

        How marvellous it must be to sneer at Dawkins without watching/reading Dawkins – it’s a defining feature among the ‘spiritual’, but somehow really rather secularist most days of the week, ‘differently-believing’ asshats getting rich off spouting froth.

        1. Agree. There is a vast emotional need, lack, or void, in the population of humanity at large for a way of thinking about our experience as human beings. It is very understandable that there are some people who see this vacuum and are willing to fill it to meet their own needs for fame and a steady income. I find her quite repulsive, in the nicest possible way. 😎

      1. Scene: Human guest and Kermit walk into the scene talking. The human guest steps over a line painted on the floor.

        Kermit: “I wouldn’t stand there if I were you.”

        Human Guest: “Why not?”

        Kermit: “Because that’s how far Animal’s chain reaches!”

        Animal: (suddenly appears, wildly charging the human guest) “RRRAAAARGGGH!”

        Loved that show.

        1. Me, too😻
          Placido Flamingo, Grover-as-Washington crossing the Delaware, saying “cheese”…and on and on❤️

    1. There’s some terrible lip-syncing there!

      Never mind, I don’t listen to House of the Rising Sun for the video….

      cr

  6. Wot about a clip of them Fowls heading into the barn ,or would it be too dark to film ?

    Are you having Laminate Flooring laid down ?
    I hate carpets ,Laminate flooring in the entire gaff .
    https://i.imgur.com/m1hmnN2.jpg

    The photo is our living room just after the new floor was laid,the books are in the window sill because i didn’t have anywhere else to put them .
    Guy in the photo is my twin brother who i care for ,and is a pain in the behind.

  7. Wot about a clip of them Fowls heading into the barn ,or would it be too dark to film ?

    Are you having Laminate Flooring laid down ?
    I hate carpets ,Laminate flooring in the entire gaff .
    https://i.imgur.com/m1hmnN2.jpg

    The photo is our living room just after the new floor was laid,the books are in the window sill because i didn’t have anywhere else to put them .
    Guy in the photo is my twin brother who i care for ,and is a pain in the behind.

Leave a Reply to GBJames Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *