If human beings indulged in this - and some do - there would be public outrage. Yet these occurrences only piqued scientific interest.
Ok. a silly one, a very silly one. A man is stood by a river which he has to cross by boat. With him are a rabbit, a lettuce and a wolf. He has to take them all across, but he can only take one at a time. If he leaves the rabbit with the lettuce it will be eaten, and if he leaves the wolf with the rabbit it will come to the same result. How many times must he cross the river ?
He takes the rabbit over and leaves it, comes back = 2 crossings He takes the lettuce over and brings back the rabbit = 2 crossings He takes the wolf over, leaves it with the lettuce, comes back = 2 crossings Takes the rabbit over = 1 crossing Total = 7 crossings
When Charles Darwin made a brief stop at an island group during his Beagle voyage, he came across a mystery in animal evolution that he couldn't solve - one that was only solved in 2013 thanks to DNA. The islands had just one native terrestrial mammal, and it wasn’t clear what the species was descended from, or how it had ended up in such a remote place. What was it and where was it?
When Charles Darwin stopped briefly at the Falkland Islands on the famous voyage of the Beagle, he ran into one of the great mysteries in animal evolution. The islands had just one native terrestrial mammal, which he confusingly described as a “wolf-like fox”. It wasn’t clear what the species was descended from, or how it had ended up in such a remote place, hundreds of kilometres from the nearest mainland. The Falkland Islands wolf, known also as the warrah or Dusicyon australis, was hunted to extinction in the latter half of the 19th century. As such it was little studied. Darwin’s visit, in the species’ final decades, remains one of the only scientific observations of this poor animal. Scientists long thought that the extinct Falklands wolf was, as its name suggests, similar to a wolf. However, new research by colleagues and me published in the journal Mammal Review reveals that, in terms of skull shape and feeding habits, this mysterious “wolf” was more like a jackal. The Falklands wolf had previously been linked to wolves, coyotes and domestic dogs, and scientists even named it Canis antarticus. It wasn’t until 2009 that DNA analysis was used to prove its closest living relative is the maned wolf of South America, which is actually neither a wolf nor a fox. Nevertheless, this species of wild canid (the wider dog family) is characterised by unusually tall limbs, which make it very different from the rather sturdy Falklands wo
This is why he likes Putin: Trump Administration Orders Communications Blackout For US Scientists 438 Shares Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Environment please log in to view this image By Robin Andrews 25/01/2017, 15:54 Science and reason are up for one hell of a fight under the Trump administration. We now live in the Orwellian world of “alternative facts”, which are like facts, but bullshit. It’s surely only a matter of time before the Ministry of Truth is set up. Right off the bat, controversial oil pipelines have been resurrected on the very same day Trump claimed to the automobile industry that he’s an “environmentalist.” References to climate change have been eradicated from the White House website, with orders for the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to follow suit. Clean power plans have been scuttled, various scientific agencies are having their Twitter accounts censured, and scientific funding is being bled dry. Now, as internal memos published by BuzzFeed have revealed, federal scientists were also briefly muzzled from speaking about their work with the press. The EPA, the US Department of Agriculture (USDA), the Department of Health and Human Services, the Department of Transportation and the National Park Service – all of which contain thousands upon thousands of taxpayer-funded scientists – were told a few days ago to cease and desist any form of communication with the public and the media when it came to their research. Although still allowed to publish in scientific journals, any reference to their work in any other form would have been banned. News releases, photographs, infographics, fact sheets, and any social media content on Facebook, Twitter, and elsewhere would be prohibited in any form, according to the memos. They did not explicitly reference President Trump or his new administration, but this is the only authority such a widespread gagging order could have originated from. However, at the time of writing, the administrator of the scientific wing of the USDA rescinded this muzzling order. There’s no update as of yet on whether or not the other federal agencies have decided to fight back against this information suppression.