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Congratulations.
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By being here,
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listening,
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alive,
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a member of a growing species,
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you are one of history's
greatest winners;
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the culmination of a success story
four billion years in the making.
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You are life's one percent.
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The losers,
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the 99 percent of species
who have ever lived,
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are dead -- `
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killed by fire, flood, asteroids,
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predation, starvation, ice, heat
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and the cold math of natural selection.
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Your ancestors,
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back to the earliest fishes,
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overcame all these challenges.
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You are here because
of golden opportunities
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made possible by mass extinction.
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(Laughter)
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It's true.
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The same is true
of your co-winners and relatives.
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The 34,000 kinds of fishes.
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How did we all get so lucky?
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Will we continue to win?
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I am a fish paleobiologist
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who uses big data --
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the fossil record --
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to study how some species win
and others lose.
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The living can't tell us;
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they know nothing but winning.
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So, we must speak with the dead.
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How do we make dead fishes talk?
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Museums contain multitudes
of beautiful fish fossils,
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but their real beauty emerges
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when combined with the larger
number of ugly, broken fossils,
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and reduced to ones and zeros.
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I control a 500 million year database
for evolutionary patterns.
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For example,
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fish forms can be captured by coordinates
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and transformed to reveal
major pathways of change
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and trends through time.
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Here is the story
of the winners and losers
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of just one pivotal event
I discovered using fossil data.
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Let's travel back 360 million years --
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six times as long ago
as the last dinosaur --
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to the Devonian Period;
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a strange world.
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Armored predators
with razor-edge jaws dominated
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alongside huge fishes
with arm bones in their fins.
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Crab-like fishes scuttled
across the sea floor.
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The few ray-fin relatives
of salmon and tuna cowered
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at the bottom of the food chain.
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The few early sharks
lived offshore in fear.
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Your few four-legged ancestsors,
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the tetrapods,
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struggled in tropical river plains.
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Ecosystems were crowded.
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There was no escape,
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no opportunity in sight.
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Then the world ended.
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(Laughter)
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No, it is a good thing.
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96 percent of all fish species died
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during the Hangenberg Event
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359 million years ago.
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An interval of fire and ice.
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A crowded world was disrupted
and swept away.
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Now, you might think
that's the end of the story.
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The mighty fell,
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the meek inherited the earth,
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and here we are.
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But winning is not that simple.
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The handful of survivors
came from many groups --
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all greatly outnumbered by their own dead.
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They ranged from top predator
to bottomfeeder,
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big to small,
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marine to freshwater.
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The extinction was a filter.
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It merely leveled the playing field.
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What really counted was what survivors did
over the next several million years
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in that devasted world.
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The former overlords
should've had an advantage.
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They became even larger,
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storing energy,
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investing in their young,
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spreading across the globe,
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feasting on fishes,
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keeping what had always worked
and biding their time.
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Yet they merely persisted for a while,
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declining without innovating,
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becoming living fossils.
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They were too stuck in their ways,
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and are now largely forgotten.
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A few of the long-suffering ray fins,
sharks and four-legged tetrapods
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went the opposite direction.
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They became smaller --
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living fast,
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dying young,
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eating little
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and reproducing rapidly.
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They tried new foods,
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different homes,
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strange heads
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and weird bodies.
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(Laughter)
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And they found opportunity proliferated,
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and won the future
for their 60,000 living species,
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including you.
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That's why they look familiar.
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You know their names.
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Winning is not about random events
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or an arms race.
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Rather, survivors went down alternative,
evolutionary pathways.
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Some found incredible success
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while others became dead fish walking.
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(Laughter)
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A real scientific term.
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(Laughter)
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I am now investigating how these pathways
to victory and defeat repeat across time.
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My lab has already compiled thousands
upon thousands of dead fishes,
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but many more remain.
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However, it is already clear
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that your ancestors' survival
through mass extinction,
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and their responses in the aftermath
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made you who you are today.
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What does this tell us for the future?
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As long as a handful of species survive,
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life will recover.
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The versatile and the lucky
will not just replace what was lost,
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but win in new forms.
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It just might take several million years.
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Thank you.
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(Applause)