1831: HMS Beagle, a 10-gun, Cherokee-class brig sloop of the Royal Navy’s survey service, sets sail from Plymouth, England on its second voyage as a survey vessel.
On board, at the invitation of Beagle captain Robert FitzRoy, is a young biologist called Charles Darwin. Darwin’s account of The Voyage of the Beagle, published in 1839, establishes [...]
Posts Tagged ‘darwin’
Dec. 27, 1831: Beagle Sets Sail With a Very Special Passenger
Sept. 20, 1842: Dewar’s Fortune Is Scotched
1842: Sir James Dewar is born, but not into a vacuum. He will invent a vessel designed to make research into gases at extreme low temperatures easier, and it does. But the Dewar Flask also becomes the thermos bottle we use to this day, and — in a cruel twist of fate — its inventor [...]
Sept. 10, 1941: Stephen Jay Gould Born
1941: Stephen Jay Gould, who will become a famous evolutionary theorist and popular science writer, is born in New York City.
As a 5-year-old, Gould became fascinated by paleontology during a visit to the American Museum of Natural History with his father. “I dreamed of becoming a scientist, in general, and a paleontologist, in particular, ever [...]
Indonesia to renegotiate Singapore gas contract, daily reports
Indonesia will renegotiate its natural gas sales contract with Singapore to meet domestic demand for the fuel, Investor Daily Indonesia reported, citing Darwin Saleh, the nation’s energy minister.
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A new giant lizard
The golden age of zoology was the 19th century, and the islands of South-East Asia were particularly rich hunting grounds. Indeed, it was on an expedition to the area that Alfred Russel Wallace came up with the idea of evolution by natural selection and, through a letter to Charles Darwin describing his hypothesis, panicked Darwin into publishing his own thoughts on the matter in “The Origin of Species”. It might therefore be thought that by now the area’s jungles would have been picked clean of large, showy species. Not so, apparently. This week Biology Letters, one of the journals of the venerable Royal Society of which both Wallace and Darwin were fellows, describes something novel from northern Luzon, in the Philippines, that is large, showy and also slightly strange. It is a monitor lizard as long as a man is tall, which is a close relative of the notoriously carnivorous Komodo dragon, yet which is, itself, vegetarian. Varanus bitatawa is, as is often the way of these things, well known to local hunters. Until Luke Welton and Rafe Brown of the University of Kansas came along, though, it was unknown to science.
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Feb. 8, 1865: Mendel Reads Paper Founding Genetics
1865: Gregor Mendel reads his first paper on genetics to the local scientific organization. It will be decades before Mendel’s intellectual seeds take root in the fertile grounds of Darwinism and grow a scientific revolution.
Mendel was born in 1822 and became an Augustinian monk, living at the monastery in Brünn, Moravia. (Moravia was then ruled [...]
U.K.’s Great Escape Fest
U.K.’S GREAT ESCAPE FESTIVAL ANNOUNCES FIRST WAVE OF ARTISTS
Broken Social Scene |
The Great Escape, Europe’s acclaimed music festival and industry conference has announced the first wave of acts for its landmark fifth annual Brighton, U.K. outing. Taking over 30+ venues throughout the city and hosting over 350 bands playing across three days, the event will once again showcase rising stars, as well as give fans the opportunity to see some of the most loved bands around in pleasingly intimate surroundings.
Opening the 2010 festival season in style and running from May 13-15, this year’s Great Escape has confirmed Manchester’s Delphic will be bringing their much lauded indie-rave hybrid to southern shores. Tipped as ones to watch by all in 2010, and already garnering almost universally high praise for the debut album Acolyte, this may be the last chance you get to see the band before they make the leap to filling the stadiums that their anthemic warehouse-pop hints at.
Also confirmed for this year’s event are drum ‘n’ bass overlords Chase and Status. Having built a reputation as one of the most blisteringly on-point live acts in dance music, it’s guaranteed to be nothing short of breathtaking to witness them dropping the heavy bass pressure.
Canadian uber-group Broken Social Scene, who are currently putting the finishing touches to their fourth album, will be crossing the Atlantic to join the action with their incredibly engaging baroque-pop. The festival will also be set alight by quirky new wave bliss from the sublime Marina and The Diamonds, hooky electronica from the BBC‘s top tip for 2010 and BRITS Critics Choice winner Ellie Goulding, cutting edge Basque folk funk from Crystal Fighters, intergalactic rockabilly-esque folk from Sheffield duo Slow Club, experimental synth sounds from Philadelphia’s Cold Cave, Brighton’s very own Esben & The Witch, lush and icy electro-pop from Hurts, garage rocking duo Japandroids, psychedelic surf rock from Real Estate, swampy ragged blues from Timber Timbre, indie rock with a side of calisthenics from Darwin Deez, hazy bedroom pop from Best Coast, punky power-popsters The Cheek, primal soundscapes from Wild Palms and psych action from Kiwi band Ruby Suns.
Early bird tickets, that not only get you in to see all the bands but will also get you access to outdoor gigs, afternoon shows, club nights, after parties and much more, are on sale now for a mere 45 Euro here.
Dec. 21, 1898: The Curies Discover Radium
1898: Radium is discovered by the husband-and-wife team of Pierre and Marie Curie.
Sorbonne-bred physicist Pierre Curie had been noodling with crystals and magnetism since the early 1880s. He was a professor at the School of Physics in Paris when one of his students, Marie Sklodowska, caught his eye. They wed in 1895, and theirs was [...]
Now, a social networking tool for natural historians
Researchers at London’s Natural History Museum have created a social networking tool called ‘Scratchpads’ where natural historians can get together and share their data.
Vincent Smith, Simon Rycroft, David Roberts and colleagues created the data-publishing framework for groups of people to create their own natural history-based social networks.
Users create a virtual workbench to study aspects [...]
H-1B Visa Scam Investigation Digs Up Dirt
A two-and-a-half-year investigation yields one of the most bizarre cases of alleged visa fraud in the history of California. Fictitious companies for H-1B visas? Check. Exploitation of immigrants? Check. Money laundering via cemetery plots? Oh, indeed.
– An immigration lawyer in West Covina,
Calif., a suburb of Los
Angeles, and his business partners have been charged
with visa fraud in relation to an elaborate scheme
targeting immigrants, according to a report from the U.S. Immigration and
Customs Enforcement agency.
Kelly Einstein Darwin G…
Sept. 29, 1898: Stalin’s Scientist Sees First Light
1898: Trofim Denisovich Lysenko is born in Karlovka, Ukraine. As dictator Joseph Stalin’s lapdog and top scientist, his influence will almost single-handedly retard the course of Soviet science, especially the fields of genetics and agronomy.
Early Soviet propagandists often relied on “miracles of science” to boost the status of their fledgling state. The young plant breeder [...]
Kirk Cameron Evolution Debate
That Mike Seaver’s always horsing around! Former Growing Pains star Kirk Cameron is causing controversy with his recent remarks on evolution. The teen heartthrob-turned-born-again-Christian helped create a special edition of The Origin of Species “”with a 50-page introduction that picks apart Charles Darwin’s theory on evolution by linking it to everything from Nazism to eugenics.
On [...]
Correction: Lightyears
In “As important as Darwin” published on August 15th, we said that no astronomer can look beyond a distance of 13.7 billion lightyears. This was incorrect. The universe has expanded during the 13.7 billion years that light has been zipping across it and, as a consequence, astronomers can see to distances of perhaps as far as 47 billion lightyears.
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Like I said

By Denise Winterman
BBC News Magazine
Former boxing world champion Chris Eubank is having his teeth fixed and hopes it will cure his lisp. But is a speech impediment a barrier to success
Churchill, Newton, Darwin, Eubank – can you spot the odd one out If you’re talking about speech impediments then there isn’t one, they all had or have one. But in case of former boxing world champion Chris Eubank, not for much longer.
He is spending £30,000 on getting his teeth fixed and hopes it will cure his pronounced lisp. "Before long nobody will be able to accuse me of having a lisp," he says.

For a man who goes to great lengths to stand out from the crowd – note his penchant for tweeds, monocles and seven-tonne articulated lorries – it seems a strange move. After all, his lisp is one of the things he is best known for.
But his expensive dental work suggests he is still conscious of it at the age of 42. And judging by the bad puns in the papers’ coverage of the news, he has good reason. So how do you deal with a speech impediment
We will never really know with Charles Darwin and Isaac Newton, but we do know their stutters certainly didn’t hold them back professionally. The same can be said of Winston Churchill, he defined history with his words and actions – not his stammer.
Jonathan Ross famously cannot pronounce his Rs, a phonetic difficulty that is technically known as rhotacism. It hasn’t affected his multi-million pound career as a chat-show host and presenter, but it’s definitely one of the things that defines him in the public eye.
For James Alexander Gordon it was case of tackling it head on and overcoming it. As a child he suffered from slurred speech, a condition known as dysarthria, but it didn’t stop wanting to be a radio presenter.
‘Sobbing’
He has been the voice of the football results on BBC radio for over three decades, and his voice is so distinctive students in Sweden use it to practice their inflection.
"Speech therapists didn’t even exist back then but I had two strong-willed parents who drove me on," he says.
"I loved language and sounds from an early age and was encouraged to read and speak all the time. This love meant overcoming my impediment was a challenge, but never horrid or a chore.
SPEECH PROBLEMS- Apraxia – Unable to consistently and correctly say what you mean
- Cluttering – Repeating syllables or phrases multiple times
- Dysprosody – Changes in the intensity, rhythm, cadence and intonation of words
- Rhotacism – Difficulty pronouncing Rs
- Selective Mutism – Unable to speak in certain situations
Source: Speech Disorder
"I just kept at it and it took a combination of the mental and physical to succeed. Because of the support of my family I never thought I wouldn’t get rid of my slurred speech, it didn’t enter my head.
"The first time I read the news on BBC radio my parents were listening at home. My father disappeared from the room and my mother found him sobbing in their bedroom. He said ‘the wee bugger has done it’. He was proud and I’m proud of what I’ve overcome and achieved."
Specialists are quick to point out there is a wide array of speech impediments and communication disabilities, and like any spectrum some are more severe than others.
The causes are also varied and complex. Some people are born with them, while others acquire them because of anything from a stroke to acute shyness. In some cases specialists simply don’t understand why they happen.
‘Comfort zones’
But everyday, millions of people in the UK are coping with speech impediments which impact on every area of their lives.
"It’s inevitable because speaking is the way we conduct relationships and a way we get across our emotions and feelings," says Melanie Derbyshire, chief executive of the charity Speakability. "Relationships are involved in nearly everything we do."
For some people accepting their impediment is a large part of coping with it. From there techniques and exercises can help them manage it or lessen it.

Jaik Campbell has always had a stammer and it was actually speech therapy that made him take up stand-up comedy. It’s something he says he may never have done if things had been different.
"I had speech therapy to tackle my severe stammer and it encourages you to push your comfort zones and speak as much as you can," he says. "We’d go out with our teacher and have to ask strangers for directions, things like that. I just took it to the extreme."
He explains his stutter to the audience as part of his act, but it’s not central to it. While it hasn’t hindered his career, he says some venues are wary of booking him because they are unsure what to expect. In his opinion stuttering has made him a better comedian.
"Some venues are worried I will stutter so badly I won’t be able to get much out of my mouth," he says.
"But I have coping strategies, like learning my material word for word. I think that makes me better at what I do because I know my act inside out. I’ve seen comedians without a speech impediment try to wing it and completely bomb."
‘Exhausting’
But he feels he has also experienced discrimination. He’s been turned down for lots of jobs and was even asked if he was cold and needed the heating turned up in one interview because of his stammering.
He says talking about speech impediments is important, as once people understand a lot of the pressure is off the person who has it and who they are talking to.
However, for many people their speech impediment is always on their mind and influences nearly everything they do.

Gail Thretton suffers from cluttering, when syllables or phrases are repeated multiple times literally leaving a person’s speech cluttered with words
"The reality is my speech problems are on my mind all the time and I adapt my behaviour constantly and avoid situations," she says.
"I try to explain my problem to people, but it’s just exhausting doing that all of the time. If I’m not having a good day I just don’t go out so I don’t have to mix with strangers.
"I can laugh at my problem and see the funny side of it, but sometimes I just don’t want to. It’s not such a giggle if you live with it day and night."
Maybe in the case of Eubank, who on occasion has played along with the media’s jokes about his lisp, he’s had enough of people laughing at him and not with him.
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Scientists go on show in vast cocoon
Researchers at London’s Natural History Museum will work in the public eye alongside 20m specimens
One of the most startling additions to any British museum, the £78m Cocoon at the Natural History Museum at South Kensington in London, an enigmatic, blobby form eight storeys high and 65m long in a giant glass box, will open to the public on September 15.
The structure has been created to shelter over 20m specimens of plants and animals, as well as laboratories for 220 scientists. This will be the first time that the museum’s scientists as well as its specimens will be on display.
Booking is now open for free tickets for 2,500 places on public tours every day.
Among the 17m insect and 3m plant specimens, there will be many items collected in recent years by staff on plant safaris, and others brought back over 150 years ago by Charles Darwin and Alfred Russel Wallace, the 19th century scientist whose parallel work on natural selection finally shocked Darwin into publication.
A collection of plants gathered by Sir Hans Sloane, whose work formed the basis of both the British and the natural history museums, will be on show, as well as a specimen of the famous “vegetable lamb of Tartary” – a type of fern whose cottony growth sparked the cherished legend of a plant that bore real living lambs as fruit.
Phone bookings are now being accepted for the tours, on 020-7942 5725, and online booking will open from mid-August.
Bettany & Connelly’s Darwin Movie To Open Toronto Film Festival
TORONTO — Real-life couple Jennifer Connelly and Paul Bettany will kick off the Toronto International Film Festival with the life story of Charles Darwin.
Bettany stars as the theory-of-evolution pioneer and Connelly plays his wife in “…
First Votes Cast As Polls Predict Defeat For Howard
SYDNEY – Aboriginal voters cast the first ballots in Australia’s elections
yesterday as the latest polls forecast a landslide defeat for Prime
Minister John Howard.
The votes cast by Aborigines at Kybrook Farm south of Darwin marked the
start of early voting for those unable to make it to polling stations on
election day and for Australians abroad.
The first to cast a ballot, Mr George Huddlestone, said he had voted for
Mr Howard in the last election in 2003 but objected to the government’s
move this year to seize control of remote Aboriginal communities.
“I voted Liberal last time but Howard, he’s changed the rules on us,” Mr
Huddlestone said. “Some things are changing and people are worried for
their families.”
The poll, published yesterday, showed Labour had gained two percentage
points to extend its lead over Mr Howard’s Liberal-National coalition 55
per cent against 45 per cent.
It also showed that Mr Rudd had increased his lead over Mr Howard as
preferred Prime Minister, with backing from 48 per cent of the 1,119
voters polled against 40 per cent for Howard.
Mr Howard refused to comment directly on the poll results, but said he was
“optimistic” he could win a fifth term on the basis of his handling of the
economy.
The poll also showed that Mr Howard, 68, retains a strong lead over Mr
Rudd, 50, on the question of who could best manage the economy. – Agencies




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