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    Climbing Mount Improbable

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      pupils

      changing size of, 166

      evolution of, 170

      variable shape, 169 (fig.), 168

      Quiring, Rebecca, 193

      Radiolaria, 235–6 (fig.)

      raindrops, and photons, 144

      Raup, David, 201–3, 206–7, 211

      refraction, principle of, 155 (fig.)

      refractive index, 155

      relaxation, in evolution, 135–6

      reproduction

      different from heredity, 88

      Muller's Ratchet, 85

      sexual, rearranging genes, 83–4

      retina

      as biological photocell, 145 (fig.)

      independent evolution of, 170–1

      rods and cones, 172

      Robinson, Michael, 53

      robot(s)

      definition, 281

      horse, as vehicle for DNA, 290 (fig.)

      industrial, 278–9

      movement of, 279

      self-duplicating, 281

      TRIP, 280–1

      rod, retinal, 145 (fig.), 172

      saltations, genetic defects, 97

      scallop, mirror solutions to image-forming, 176–7

      Scyllarus, homeotic mutation, 252 (fig.)

      sea-dragon, leafy, 9–10

      sea-cows, 130, 131 (fig.) {338}

      seeds, with wings, 274 (fig.)

      segmentation, 240–55

      selection

      artificial, see artificial selection

      natural, see natural selection

      pressure, 198–9

      vicarious, 324

      sex

      evolution of, 85

      Muller's Ratchet, 85

      recombination of DNA, 90

      and rearrangement of genes, 84

      reproduction on NetSpinner, 63

      spiders, 49

      shells

      computer simulation, 201, 206 (fig.), 212

      artificial selection, 215 (fig.)

      resemblance to real shells, 216–7 (fig.)

      X-ray view, 209 (fig.)

      flare, verm and spire, 204, 207 (fig.)

      shapes, 213 (fig.)

      theoretical, 218 (fig.)

      tube, 204–5

      X-ray view, 209 (fig.)

      Sherrington, Sir Charles, 326

      silk, spider, 39, 68

      and sex, 49

      stickiness, 41

      see also spiders, webs

      skate, and flounder, 134 (fig.)

      solar panels, and insect wings, 114

      soup, primeval, 282

      species, classification of, 106

      spherical aberration, 173

      spiders

      bolas, 55–7

      female, larger than males, 47

      hunting, 51

      jumping, 173

      male: dangers in mating, 48

      mating thread, 49 (fig.)

      tying down female, 50 (fig.)

      mating, 49, 53, 63

      mating thread, 49 (fig.)

      poisoning prey, 52

      predators, 47

      problems for, 43–52

      solution to ‘own goal’ hazard, 44

      webs, 4, 38–72

      building, 43–8

      computer simulation, 57–69

      evolution on NetSpinner, 62 (fig.)

      economy, 41

      efficiency of, 38

      fine tuning, 49–50

      laying thread, 45

      optimal tension, 54

      problems laying thread, 46–7

      radiating spokes, 46

      simulation of natural selection, 37

      stickiness, 42 (fig.)

      spine, flexing, mammals and fish, 123

      spire (shells), 203–6 (fig.)

      spirula, odd shell, 219

      spring hare, 124 (fig.)

      sprung trap, spider techniques, 54

      squids

      flying, 121

      independently evolved eyes, 145

      squirrel, flying, evolution of, 118

      stable balance theory

      evidence for, 314

      two kinds of males, 313–4

      statues

      animal, 9

      designoid, 10

      stones, no offspring from, 26

      stress

      increased mutation rates, 86

      and mutation, 83

      mutation penalized by natural selection, 86

      sun, and remote guidance technology, 138

      superposition, 188, 189 (fig.)

      survival, animal, contributions to, 36

      symmetry, 225–40

      computer biomorphs, 225–7 (fig.)

      echinoderms, 238 (fig.)

      five-way, 239

      four-way, 231 (fig.)

      ‘Isle of Man’, 232 (fig.)

      left-right, 230

      radial, 232

      six-way, 236, 237 (fig.)

      tailorbird, nest, 17 (fig.)

      telescope, Keplerian, 187

      tenrec, 19, 20 (fig.)

      termites

      compass, 17

      mimicry, 8–9, 8 (fig.)

      Terzopoulos, Demetri, 69–71

      thermals, 128

      Thomas, Keith, 256

      Thompson, D'Arcy Wentworth, 201

      Thomson, William, 76

      ‘tortoise’ robot (Machina speculatrix), 280

      ‘Total Replication of Instructions’ Program (TRIP), 276, 286

      trachymedusae, six-way symmetry, 237

      transparency, principle of refraction, 155

      traps, for insects, 14 {339}

      trees

      acacia, and ants, 266

      and evolution of flight in vertebrates, 115

      fig, and fig wasps, 262

      real and computerized, 31 (fig.)

      Trivers, Robert, 24

      trunk, elephant, 4, 92, 94

      Tu, Xiaoyuan, 69–71

      tube (shells) 204–5, 206 (fig.)

      generated by Blind Snailmaker, 212

      tusks, elephant, fossilization of, 94

      ultraviolet light, and bee vision, 259

      University of California, 113

      variation, and natural selection, 165

      Venus's fly trap, 14

      verm (shells), 204–6 (fig.), 207 (fig.)

      Vermeij, Geerat, 216

      vertebrates

      flight, 115

      see also birds

      gliding, 119 (fig.)

      and squids, independently evolved eyes, 145

      viruses

      biological purpose of, 268–72

      computer, 269

      DNA, hosts, 274

      vitreous mass, 159–61

      Vollrath, Fritz, 41, 56

      volvox, representing early life, 287

      von Frisch, Karl 17

      von Neumann, John, 281

      vultures, use of thermals, 128

      Waldorf, Uwe, 193

      Walter, W. Grey, 280

      wasps

      designoid pots, 15–6

      and figs, co-evolution, 262, 301, 307–9, 320, 324–5

      freeloader species, 312

      parasitic, 311 (fig.)

      potter, 16

      prey to spiders, 54

      selfishness, 320

      winged male, 315–6

      wingless male, 315–6

      water

      living in, 130

      return to, by large mammals, 130

      Watson, J. D., 271

      weaverbird, nest, 17 (fig.)

      webs, spider, see spiders, webs whales, 130, 131 (fig.)

      dry-land history, 130

      whippet, artificial selection, 29 (fig.)

      Wickramasinghe, Chandra, 75

      Williams, George, 293

      wings, 4

      aerodynamic efficiency, 113

      birds and aeroplanes, 127

      fig wasps, 301

      insects, 241

      on seeds, 274 (fig.)

      spread of genetic instructions, 273

      wolf, artificial selection, 29 (fig.)

      worms, primitive compound eyes, 184 (fig.)

      Wri
    ght, Sewall, 135

      Zschokke, Sam, 58 {340}

      * * *

      * I shall be using Latin names, and I hope I shall be forgiven a schoolmasterly footnote on the conventions governing them because surprising numbers of educated people (perhaps the same people as wince-makingly refer to Darwin's masterwork as Origin of the Species) get them wrong. Latin names have two parts: a generic name (e.g. Homo is a genus) followed by a specific name (e.g. sapiens is the only surviving species of Homo), both written in italics or underlined. Names of larger units are not italicized. The genus Homo belongs to the family Hominidae. Generic names are unique: there is only one genus Homo, only one genus Vespa. Species often share a name with species in other genera, but there is no confusion because of the uniqueness of the generic name: Vespa vulgaris is a wasp, in no danger of being mistaken for Octopus vulgaris. The generic name always begins with a capital letter and the specific name never does (nowadays, although the original convention was that it could if derived from a proper name. Even Darwinii would nowadays be written darwinii). If ever you see (and you often will) Homo Sapiens or homo sapiens it is always a mistake. Note, by the way, that the word ‘species’ is both singular and plural. The plural of genus is genera.

      • Judith Flanders has called my attention to the following amusingly relevant story in Robert X. Cringely's book, Accidental Empires. The story concerns the Apple III, a desktop computer of the generation between the famous Apple II and the even more famous Macintosh, launched in 1980: ‘...the automated machinery that inserted dozens of computer chips on the main circuit board didn't push them into their sockets firmly enough. Apple's answer was to tell 90,000 customers to pick up their Apple III carefully, hold it twelve to eighteen inches above a level surface, and then drop it, hoping that the resulting crash would reseat all the chips.’

      * After writing this I was informed by a correspondent, Howard Kleyn, formerly of the Cable and Wireless Company, that humans do, as a matter of fact, make something equivalent to a graded index lens. It is actually a graded index optical fibre. By his description, it works like this. You start with a hollow tube of good glass, about a metre long and a few centimetres in diameter, which you heat up. You then puff into the tube finely powdered glass. The powdered glass melts and fuses with the lining of the tube, thereby thickening the lining while narrowing the bore of the tube. Now comes the cunning part. As this procedure progresses, the powder that is puffed in is of gradually changing quality: specifically, it has been ground from glass of progressively increasing refractive index. By the time the hoEow bore has narrowed to nothing, the tube has become a rod made of highly refracting glass at its central core with graduafly decreasing refractive index as you move towards its outer layers. The rod is then heated again, and drawn out into a fine filament. This filament retains the same graded refractive index, from core to periphery, in miniature, as the rod from which it was drawn. It is technically a graded index lens, albeit a very thin, long one. Its lens property is used not for focusing an image but for improving its quality as a light guide which does not allow its beam of light to disperse. Several of these filaments would normally be used to manufacture a multi-stranded optical fibre cable.

      * These engaging little animals, whose habit of cocking their heads to look at you gives them an almost human charm, stalk their prey like a cat and then jump on to it explosively and without warning. Explosive it more or less literally is, by the way, for they jump by hydraulically pumping fluid into all eight legs simultaneously — a little like the way we (those of us who have them) erect our penises, but their ‘leg erections’ are sudden rather than gradual.

     


     

      Richard Dawkins, Climbing Mount Improbable

      (Series: # )

     

     


     

     
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