Top ten evolution articles in 2008
December 29th, 2008 - 12:41 pm ICT by ANI ( Leave a comment )London, Dec 29 (ANI): New Scientist has made a list of the top ten evolution articles that it presented in the year 2008.
So, the top 10 articles on evolution in 2008 are: -
How trees changed the world: 450 million years ago, there was no such thing as a tree, with few plants growing more than a centimeter tall. Between then and now, things happened to give another dimension to plant growth and to create the diversity we see today.
Reclaiming the peppered moth for science: The peppered moth used to be the textbook example of evolution in action. Then, about a decade ago, creationists began an orchestrated a campaign to discredit it - and with it the entire edifice of evolution. Now biologists are fighting to take it back.
Uncovering the evolution of the bacterial flagellum: The whip-like tail of some bacteria has become the cause celebre of the intelligent design movement and a focal point in sciences ongoing struggle against unreason.
Evolution: What missing link? - The fossil record used to be thought of as a patchy and unreliable record of evolutionary change. Today, that record is much more dependable. When it comes to “transitional fossils” - those that bridge the gap between major groups of organisms - we now have some excellent examples.
Evolution: 24 myths and misconceptions - Evolution is perhaps the best known yet least understood of all scientific theories. New Scientist presented the facts behind common misunderstandings that have grown up around the concept.
Rewriting Darwin: The new non-genetic inheritance - We resemble our parents and can fall prey to the same diseases mainly because we inherit their genes. Yet, there is another form of inheritance that does not rely on genes, one that allows characteristics to be passed on that are acquired during a persons lifetime.
The Ordivician: Lifes second big bang - The Cambrian period, starting about 540 million years ago, is famous for the appearance of all but one of the types of creatures we see around us today. Yet in terms of new species, this period cannot hold a candle to a little-known explosion of life called the Great Ordivician Biodiversification Event.
Vestigial organs: Remnants of evolution - From goosebumps to wisdom teeth, vestigial organs have long perplexed biologists. What was their original purpose and what happened to make them redundant? (ANI)
- Preserved fossils of marine animals living 480-472 million years ago found - May 14, 2010
- Modern-day genomes used to reconstruct evolution of 3bn-yr-old microbes - Dec 20, 2010
- Dinosaurs probably had lice: Study - Apr 06, 2011
- Molecular decay of enamel-specific gene in toothless mammals supports theory of evolution - Sep 04, 2009
- Scientists recreate billion-year-old enzyme - Nov 01, 2011
- New genetic study helps solve Darwin's mystery of evolution of flowering plants - Apr 11, 2011
- Entire genome of extinct human decoded from finger bone - Feb 08, 2012
- 'Walking cactus' sheds light on the evolution of insects, spiders - Feb 24, 2011
- Study proves Darwin's theory of universal common ancestry - May 13, 2010
- 500m-year-old squid-like carnivore no more a mystery - May 27, 2010
- Coral reefs are hotspot for evolution, say scientists - Jan 08, 2010
- Scientists debunk creationists' claim that dinos and humans co-existed - Mar 28, 2011
- Ancient animals could see in dark - Jul 01, 2011
- Epileptic seizures linked to ancient gene family? - Aug 02, 2010
- Two-billion-year-old macrofossils discovered in West Africa - Jul 01, 2010
Tags: bacterial flagellum, big bang, biologists, bridge the gap, cambrian period, cause celebre, edifice, evolutionary change, fossil record, genetic inheritance, intelligent design movement, million years, misconceptions evolution, misunderstandings, moth, new scientist, peppered moth, plant growth, textbook example, transitional fossils