You have no idea where camels really come from
-
0:01 - 0:03So, this is a story
-
0:03 - 0:05about how we know what we know.
-
0:06 - 0:08It's a story about this woman,
-
0:09 - 0:11Natalia Rybczynski.
-
0:11 - 0:13She's a paleobiologist,
-
0:13 - 0:17which means she specializes
in digging up really old dead stuff. -
0:17 - 0:20(Audio) Natalia Rybczynski: Yeah,
I had someone call me "Dr. Dead Things." -
0:20 - 0:23Latif Nasser: And I think
she's particularly interesting -
0:23 - 0:25because of where she digs that stuff up,
-
0:25 - 0:29way above the Arctic Circle
in the remote Canadian tundra. -
0:30 - 0:33Now, one summer day in 2006,
-
0:33 - 0:36she was at a dig site called
the Fyles Leaf Bed, -
0:36 - 0:41which is less than 10 degrees latitude
away from the magnetic north pole. -
0:41 - 0:44(Audio) NR: Really, it's not
going to sound very exciting, -
0:44 - 0:48because it was a day of walking
with your backpack and your GPS -
0:48 - 0:52and notebook and just picking up
anything that might be a fossil. -
0:52 - 0:54LN: And at some point,
she noticed something. -
0:54 - 0:57(Audio) NR: Rusty, kind of rust-colored,
-
0:57 - 0:59about the size of the palm of my hand.
-
0:59 - 1:01It was just lying on the surface.
-
1:01 - 1:04LN: And at first she thought
it was just a splinter of wood, -
1:04 - 1:07because that's the sort of thing
people had found -
1:07 - 1:10at the Fyles Leaf Bed before --
prehistoric plant parts. -
1:10 - 1:13But that night, back at camp ...
-
1:13 - 1:15(Audio) NR: ... I get out the hand lens,
-
1:15 - 1:17I'm looking a little bit
more closely and realizing -
1:17 - 1:20it doesn't quite look
like this has tree rings. -
1:20 - 1:21Maybe it's a preservation thing,
-
1:21 - 1:24but it looks really like ...
-
1:24 - 1:25bone.
-
1:25 - 1:28LN: Huh. So over the next four years,
-
1:28 - 1:31she went to that spot over and over,
-
1:31 - 1:36and eventually collected 30 fragments
of that exact same bone, -
1:36 - 1:38most of them really tiny.
-
1:39 - 1:43(Audio) NR: It's not a whole lot.
It fits in a small Ziploc bag. -
1:43 - 1:46LN: And she tried to piece them
together like a jigsaw puzzle. -
1:47 - 1:48But it was challenging.
-
1:48 - 1:51(Audio) NR: It's broken up
into so many little tiny pieces, -
1:51 - 1:56I'm trying to use sand and putty,
and it's not looking good. -
1:56 - 2:01So finally, we used a 3D surface scanner.
-
2:01 - 2:02LN: Ooh!
NR: Yeah, right? -
2:02 - 2:04(Laughter)
-
2:04 - 2:07LN: It turns out it was way easier
to do it virtually. -
2:07 - 2:09(Audio) NR: It's kind of magical
when it all fits together. -
2:09 - 2:12LN: How certain were you
that you had it right, -
2:12 - 2:14that you had put it together
in the right way? -
2:14 - 2:17Was there a potential that you'd
put it together a different way -
2:17 - 2:19and have, like, a parakeet or something?
-
2:19 - 2:20(Laughter)
-
2:20 - 2:24(Audio) NR: (Laughs) Um, no.
No, we got this. -
2:24 - 2:28LN: What she had, she discovered,
was a tibia, a leg bone, -
2:28 - 2:32and specifically, one that belonged
to a cloven-hoofed mammal, -
2:32 - 2:35so something like a cow or a sheep.
-
2:35 - 2:37But it couldn't have been either of those.
-
2:37 - 2:39It was just too big.
-
2:40 - 2:44(Audio) NR: The size of this thing,
it was huge. It's a really big animal. -
2:44 - 2:47LN: So what animal could it be?
-
2:47 - 2:50Having hit a wall, she showed
one of the fragments -
2:50 - 2:52to some colleagues of hers in Colorado,
-
2:52 - 2:54and they had an idea.
-
2:54 - 2:59(Audio) NR: We took a saw,
and we nicked just the edge of it, -
2:59 - 3:06and there was this really interesting
smell that comes from it. -
3:07 - 3:09LN: It smelled kind of like singed flesh.
-
3:09 - 3:12It was a smell that Natalia recognized
-
3:12 - 3:16from cutting up skulls
in her gross anatomy lab: -
3:16 - 3:17collagen.
-
3:17 - 3:20Collagen is what gives
structure to our bones. -
3:20 - 3:22And usually, after so many years,
-
3:22 - 3:23it breaks down.
-
3:23 - 3:28But in this case, the Arctic had acted
like a natural freezer and preserved it. -
3:28 - 3:32Then a year or two later,
Natalia was at a conference in Bristol, -
3:32 - 3:35and she saw that a colleague
of hers named Mike Buckley -
3:35 - 3:41was demoing this new process
that he called "collagen fingerprinting." -
3:41 - 3:45It turns out that different species
have slightly different structures -
3:45 - 3:46of collagen,
-
3:46 - 3:49so if you get a collagen profile
of an unknown bone, -
3:49 - 3:51you can compare it
to those of known species, -
3:51 - 3:54and, who knows, maybe you get a match.
-
3:55 - 3:58So she shipped him one of the fragments,
-
3:58 - 3:59FedEx.
-
3:59 - 4:03(Audio) NR: Yeah, you want to track it.
It's kind of important. -
4:03 - 4:04(Laughter)
-
4:04 - 4:05LN: And he processed it,
-
4:05 - 4:10and compared it to 37 known
and modern-day mammal species. -
4:11 - 4:12And he found a match.
-
4:13 - 4:17It turns out that
the 3.5 million-year-old bone -
4:17 - 4:21that Natalia had dug
out of the High Arctic -
4:22 - 4:23belonged to ...
-
4:24 - 4:25a camel.
-
4:25 - 4:27(Laughter)
-
4:27 - 4:31(Audio) NR: And I'm thinking, what?
That's amazing -- if it's true. -
4:31 - 4:34LN: So they tested
a bunch of the fragments, -
4:34 - 4:36and they got the same result for each one.
-
4:36 - 4:42However, based on the size
of the bone that they found, -
4:42 - 4:48it meant that this camel was 30 percent
larger than modern-day camels. -
4:48 - 4:51So this camel would have been
about nine feet tall, -
4:51 - 4:52weighed around a ton.
-
4:52 - 4:54(Audience reacts)
-
4:54 - 4:55Yeah.
-
4:55 - 4:58Natalia had found a Giant Arctic camel.
-
4:58 - 5:00(Laughter)
-
5:02 - 5:05Now, when you hear the word "camel,"
-
5:05 - 5:09what may come to mind is one of these,
-
5:10 - 5:13the Bactrian camel
of East and Central Asia. -
5:13 - 5:16But chances are the postcard image
you have in your brain -
5:16 - 5:20is one of these, the dromedary,
-
5:20 - 5:22quintessential desert creature --
-
5:22 - 5:27hangs out in sandy, hot places
like the Middle East and the Sahara, -
5:27 - 5:28has a big old hump on its back
-
5:28 - 5:31for storing water
for those long desert treks, -
5:31 - 5:34has big, broad feet to help it
tromp over sand dunes. -
5:35 - 5:41So how on earth would one of these guys
end up in the High Arctic? -
5:42 - 5:45Well, scientists have known
for a long time, turns out, -
5:45 - 5:47even before Natalia's discovery,
-
5:47 - 5:53that camels are actually
originally American. -
5:53 - 5:58(Music: The Star-Spangled Banner)
-
5:58 - 6:00(Laughter)
-
6:00 - 6:01They started here.
-
6:02 - 6:06For nearly 40 of the 45 million years
that camels have been around, -
6:06 - 6:10you could only find them in North America,
-
6:10 - 6:13around 20 different species, maybe more.
-
6:13 - 6:16(Audio) LN: If I put them all in a lineup,
would they look different? -
6:16 - 6:19NR: Yeah, you're going to have
different body sizes. -
6:19 - 6:20You'll have some with really long necks,
-
6:21 - 6:23so they're actually
functionally like giraffes. -
6:23 - 6:26LN: Some had snouts, like crocodiles.
-
6:26 - 6:30(Audio) NR: The really primitive,
early ones would have been really small, -
6:30 - 6:33almost like rabbits.
-
6:33 - 6:35LN: What? Rabbit-sized camels?
-
6:35 - 6:37(Audio) NR: The earliest ones.
-
6:37 - 6:39So those ones you probably
would not recognize. -
6:39 - 6:41LN: Oh my God, I want a pet rabbit-camel.
-
6:41 - 6:43(Audio) NR: I know,
wouldn't that be great? -
6:43 - 6:45(Laughter)
-
6:45 - 6:47LN: And then about three
to seven million years ago, -
6:47 - 6:50one branch of camels
went down to South America, -
6:50 - 6:53where they became llamas and alpacas,
-
6:53 - 6:56and another branch crossed over
the Bering Land Bridge -
6:56 - 6:58into Asia and Africa.
-
6:58 - 7:00And then around the end
of the last ice age, -
7:00 - 7:03North American camels went extinct.
-
7:04 - 7:06So, scientists knew all of that already,
-
7:06 - 7:12but it still doesn't fully explain
how Natalia found one so far north. -
7:12 - 7:17Like, this is, temperature-wise,
the polar opposite of the Sahara. -
7:17 - 7:20Now to be fair,
-
7:20 - 7:21three and a half million years ago,
-
7:21 - 7:25it was on average 22 degrees Celsius
warmer than it is now. -
7:25 - 7:28So it would have been boreal forest,
-
7:28 - 7:32so more like the Yukon or Siberia today.
-
7:33 - 7:37But still, like, they would have
six-month-long winters -
7:37 - 7:39where the ponds would freeze over.
-
7:39 - 7:40You'd have blizzards.
-
7:40 - 7:44You'd have 24 hours a day
of straight darkness. -
7:44 - 7:47Like, how ... How?
-
7:47 - 7:51How is it that one of these
Saharan superstars -
7:51 - 7:54could ever have survived
those arctic conditions? -
7:54 - 7:57(Laughter)
-
7:57 - 8:01Natalia and her colleagues
think they have an answer. -
8:02 - 8:04And it's kind of brilliant.
-
8:05 - 8:11What if the very features that we imagine
make the camel so well-suited -
8:11 - 8:13to places like the Sahara,
-
8:13 - 8:17actually evolved to help it
get through the winter? -
8:17 - 8:22What if those broad feet were meant
to tromp not over sand, -
8:22 - 8:25but over snow, like a pair of snowshoes?
-
8:26 - 8:29What if that hump --
which, huge news to me, -
8:29 - 8:31does not contain water, it contains fat --
-
8:31 - 8:33(Laughter)
-
8:33 - 8:36was there to help the camel
get through that six-month-long winter, -
8:36 - 8:38when food was scarce?
-
8:38 - 8:42And then, only later, long after
it crossed over the land bridge -
8:42 - 8:46did it retrofit those winter features
for a hot desert environment? -
8:46 - 8:50Like, for instance, the hump
may be helpful to camels in hotter climes -
8:50 - 8:53because having all your fat in one place,
-
8:53 - 8:55like a, you know, fat backpack,
-
8:55 - 8:58means that you don't have
to have that insulation -
8:58 - 9:00all over the rest of your body.
-
9:00 - 9:02So it helps heat dissipate easier.
-
9:03 - 9:05It's this crazy idea,
-
9:05 - 9:11that what seems like proof of the camel's
quintessential desert nature -
9:11 - 9:15could actually be proof
of its High Arctic past. -
9:16 - 9:20Now, I'm not the first person
to tell this story. -
9:20 - 9:25Others have told it as a way
to marvel at evolutionary biology -
9:25 - 9:28or as a keyhole into the future
of climate change. -
9:29 - 9:31But I love it for a totally
different reason. -
9:32 - 9:35For me, it's a story about us,
-
9:35 - 9:37about how we see the world
-
9:37 - 9:39and about how that changes.
-
9:40 - 9:43So I was trained as a historian.
-
9:43 - 9:47And I've learned that, actually,
a lot of scientists are historians, too. -
9:47 - 9:49They make sense of the past.
-
9:49 - 9:54They tell the history of our universe,
of our planet, of life on this planet. -
9:55 - 9:56And as a historian,
-
9:56 - 10:01you start with an idea in your mind
of how the story goes. -
10:01 - 10:04(Audio) NR: We make up stories
and we stick with it, -
10:04 - 10:05like the camel in the desert, right?
-
10:05 - 10:08That's a great story!
It's totally adapted for that. -
10:08 - 10:10Clearly, it always lived there.
-
10:10 - 10:14LN: But at any moment, you could
uncover some tiny bit of evidence. -
10:14 - 10:17You could learn some tiny thing
-
10:17 - 10:21that forces you to reframe
everything you thought you knew. -
10:21 - 10:24Like, in this case, this one scientist
finds this one shard -
10:25 - 10:26of what she thought was wood,
-
10:26 - 10:31and because of that, science has a totally
new and totally counterintuitive theory -
10:31 - 10:35about why this absurd
Dr. Seuss-looking creature -
10:35 - 10:37looks the way it does.
-
10:37 - 10:42And for me, it completely upended
the way I think of the camel. -
10:42 - 10:46It went from being
this ridiculously niche creature -
10:46 - 10:49suited only to this
one specific environment, -
10:49 - 10:54to being this world traveler
that just happens to be in the Sahara, -
10:54 - 10:57and could end up virtually anywhere.
-
10:58 - 11:04(Applause)
-
11:14 - 11:16This is Azuri.
-
11:17 - 11:19Azuri, hi, how are you doing?
-
11:19 - 11:22OK, here, I've got
one of these for you here. -
11:22 - 11:24(Laughter)
-
11:24 - 11:28So Azuri is on a break
from her regular gig -
11:28 - 11:31at the Radio City Music Hall.
-
11:31 - 11:33(Laughter)
-
11:33 - 11:34That's not even a joke.
-
11:35 - 11:36Anyway --
-
11:36 - 11:41But really, Azuri is here
as a living reminder -
11:41 - 11:45that the story of our world
is a dynamic one. -
11:45 - 11:50It requires our willingness
to readjust, to reimagine. -
11:50 - 11:54(Laughter)
-
11:54 - 11:56Right, Azuri?
-
11:56 - 12:02And, really, that we're all
just one shard of bone away -
12:02 - 12:04from seeing the world anew.
-
12:05 - 12:06Thank you very much.
-
12:06 - 12:13(Applause)
- Title:
- You have no idea where camels really come from
- Speaker:
- Latif Nasser
- Description:
-
Latif Nasser speaks at TED Talks Live 2015
- Video Language:
- English
- Team:
closed TED
- Project:
- TEDTalks
- Duration:
- 12:27
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Brian Greene edited English subtitles for You have no idea where camels really come from | |
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Brian Greene edited English subtitles for You have no idea where camels really come from | |
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Brian Greene edited English subtitles for You have no idea where camels really come from | |
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Brian Greene edited English subtitles for You have no idea where camels really come from | |
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Camille Martínez approved English subtitles for You have no idea where camels really come from | |
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Camille Martínez edited English subtitles for You have no idea where camels really come from | |
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Camille Martínez edited English subtitles for You have no idea where camels really come from | |
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Camille Martínez edited English subtitles for You have no idea where camels really come from |