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科学美国人60秒:腐肉有助于研究石化现象

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This is Scientific American — 60-Second Science. I'm Christopher Intagliata.
The fossil record is far from being a complete library of everything that's ever lived.
"The vast, vast majority of everything that's ever lived has completely decayed away, bones and all, even, you know, fur, animals that have bones and shells. So fossilization is a very rare occurrence." Duncan Murdock, a research fellow at the Oxford University Museum of Natural History.
"But then if you play the numbers game and think about how many organisms have lived, then fossilization is kind of inevitable, that some things will get into the fossil record."
But what parts of an organism fossilize—and in which stage of decomposition—can vary, meaning it can be hard to reconstruct a living animal from what's represented in rock. Plus, most of the fossil record is bones and teeth. To find any evidence of the soft-tissue of ancient animals is incredibly rare.
So, to learn more about the process of decay and fossilization that can preserve soft tissue, Murdock and his team dissect marine animals, like hagfish and lampreys, as they lie rotting in the lab. The study of how organisms become preserved is called taphonomy. And it can stink.

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腐肉有助于研究石化现象.jpg
"Yeah I mean it's certainly a very smelly place to work sometimes." Smelly, but it gives them a step-by-step look at how creatures' bodies change as they decay.
"The first signs the animal is decaying, is the very softest tissues like the guts and eyes start to decay away, and then fine structures like the gills. And then things like the fins start to fall off, and you start to see the skin falling apart. And then eventually all that you're left with are some little bits of cartilage, and remnants of the muscle blocks."
They break down their work in the journal Palaeontology—and make the case for why rotting flesh may give a fresh look at the fossil record. Because what you don't find—and the degraded state of the material you do find—have their own stories to tell about the history of life on Earth.
Thanks for listening for Scientific American — 60-Second Science. I'm Christopher Intagliata.

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重点单词   查看全部解释    
decomposition [.di:kɔmpə'ziʃən]

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n. 分解,腐烂,变质

 
preserved [pri'zə:vd]

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adj. 保藏的;腌制的;[美俚]喝醉的

 
unexpected ['ʌnik'spektid]

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adj. 想不到的,意外的

 
reconstruct [.ri:kən'strʌkt]

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vt. 重建,修复,重现

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majority [mə'dʒɔriti]

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n. 多数,大多数,多数党,多数派
n.

 
decay [di'kei]

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v. (使)衰退,(使)腐败,腐烂
n. 衰退

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occurrence [ə'kʌrəns]

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n. 发生,事件,发现

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eventually [i'ventjuəli]

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adv. 终于,最后

 
vast [vɑ:st]

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adj. 巨大的,广阔的
n. 浩瀚的太

 
exhaust [ig'zɔ:st]

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v. 耗尽,使衰竭,使筋疲力尽
n. 排气装置

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