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PBS presents 'Your Inner Fish' a 3-part series event premiering April 9, 2014.

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Official PBS Site (lots of cool stuff to check out!)

Overview:
Have you ever wondered why the human body looks the way it does? Why our hands have five fingers instead of six? Why we walk on two legs instead of four?

It took more than 350 million years for the human body to take shape. How did it become the complicated, quirky, amazing machine it is today?

Your Inner Fish delves deep into the past to answer these questions. Premiering Wednesday, April 9, 2014, the three-part series reveals a startling truth: Hidden within the human body is a story of life on Earth.

That's because the evolution of humans can be traced into the distant past, to the earliest forms of vertebrate life on land and even to the earliest forms of life on Earth. Each of us carries the genetic imprint of creatures that lived hundreds of millions of years ago. From them, we inherited our most remarkable features — as well as quirks like bad backs and hernias.

The series is full of revelations that will surprise many viewers. Among the key insights: Our hands evolved from the fins of prehistoric fish. Our skin, hair and teeth can be traced to early reptiles. And our remarkable color vision is a legacy from ancient primates.

Based on a best-selling book by paleobiologist Neil Shubin, this scientific adventure story takes viewers from Ethiopia to the Arctic Circle on a hunt for the many ways that our animal ancestors shaped our anatomical destiny. Shubin has spent much of his life studying our ancient ancestors — searching for the deep pedigree of Homo sapiens. Using both the fossil record and DNA evidence, he traces various parts of our body's structure to creatures that lived long, long ago. Along the way, he makes it clear that we can thank our fishy origins for many human characteristics.

Endowed not just with scientific expertise, but also with natural wit and a talent for storytelling, Shubin puts all these discoveries in context. He travels from fossil-hunting expeditions in the Arctic to the deserts of Ethiopia and to the high plains of South Africa. And he reveals insights from scientists who have identified genes that we still have in common with distant forebears. He weaves together this information from past and present to demonstrate that we humans have a lot more in common than you might think with monkeys, reptiles and even fish.

The series is both an epic saga and a modern-day detective story — by turns surprising, funny and deeply profound. Come face-to-face with your "inner fish" in this completely new take on the human body. After seeing the world through Neil Shubin's eyes, you'll never look at yourself in quite the same way again!

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Episode Guide:
Episode One: Your Inner Fish. In the first episode, "Your Inner Fish," he journeys back to a time, some 375 million years ago, when the first fish crawled up onto land. Shubin's quest for the fossil record of this primeval predecessor takes viewers from highway cuts in rural Pennsylvania to the remote Arctic. After years of searching, he and his colleagues finally found a fossilized fish, known as Tiktaalik, that had enough strength in its front fins to do pushups and heave itself out of the water. Remarkably, we can trace the ancestry of our own hands and arms all the way back to these fins. Viewers also meet the scientists who discovered the DNA recipe for constructing the human hand — an essential set of instructions passed down from fish like Tiktaalik and shared today with a surprising number of other animals, from chickens to chimpanzees. Along the way, Shubin makes it clear that we can also thank our fishy past for many of our body's quirks, such as hernias. We are, every one of us, just a jury-rigged fish.

Episode Two: Your Inner Reptile. In the second episode, "Your Inner Reptile," Shubin exposes our reptilian roots. He searches for our ancient ancestors at fossil sites in the Karoo Desert of South Africa and on the tidal flats of Nova Scotia. He also reveals modern-day links to the past through visits to a fertility clinic in Chicago and a biology lab in London. Along the way, he explains how major transitions in the history of life paved the way for our ancestors' evolution into mammals. Shubin identifies some amazing connections: the amniotic sac was an innovation to keep our reptile ancestors' eggs from drying out; our complex teeth can be traced to ferocious beasts that lived millions of years before dinosaurs; and our hair is linked to the whiskers of reptile-like mammals that lived much of their lives in the dark. Our reptilian ancestors — from fearsome predators to creatures as small as a paper clip — are responsible for more than a few features of modern humans.

Episode Three: Your Inner Monkey. In the final episode of the series, "Your Inner Monkey," Shubin delves into our primate past. He travels from the badlands of Ethiopia, where the famous hominid skeletons "Lucy" and "Ardi" were found, to a forest canopy in Florida, home to modern primates. En route, he explains how many aspects of our form and function evolved. We learn that a genetic mutation in our primate ancestors conferred humans' ability to see in color — but it was an advantage that led to a decline in our sense of smell. The shape of our hands came from tree-dwelling ancestors for whom long fingers made it easier to reach fruit at the tips of fine branches. Shubin concludes by tracing the evolution of the human brain — from a tiny swelling on the nerve cord of a wormlike creature, to the three-part architecture of a shark's brain and the complex brain of primates. As Shubin observes, "Inside every organ, gene and cell in our body lie deep connections with the rest of life on our planet."

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Hosted by Neil Shubin
Meet the Host, Neil Shubin
Paleontologist and Evolutionary Biologist
University of Chicago

Neil Shubin is the Robert Bensley Distinguished Service Professor at the University of Chicago and associate dean for academic strategy of the university's Biological Sciences Division. He's also the author of two popular science books — The Universe Within: The Deep History of the Human Body (2013) and the best-selling Your Inner Fish: A Journey into the 3.5-Billion-Year History of the Human Body (2008). Your Inner Fish was named best book of the year by the National Academy of Sciences.

The focus of Shubin's research is the evolution of new organs, especially limbs. He's conducted fieldwork in Greenland, China, Canada, and much of North America and Africa and has discovered some of the earliest mammals, crocodiles, dinosaurs, frogs and salamanders in the fossil record.

One of his most significant discoveries, the 375-million-year-old Tiktaalik roseae fossil, is considered an important transitional form between fish and land animals. The 2006 announcement of the finding received worldwide media coverage and led to Shubin's being named ABC News Person of the Week. He's made many other notable observations regarding the developmental biology of limbs, using his diverse fossil findings to devise hypotheses about the genetic and developmental processes that led to anatomical transformations. He is also committed to sharing the importance of science with the public, and his lab maintains an active presence on Facebook and Twitter.

Shubin earned his Ph.D. in organismic and evolutionary biology at Harvard and was elected to the National Academy of Sciences in 2011.
Youtube Videos
Your Inner Fish: Series Promo Video
Clip #1: "Tritheledont"
Clip #2: "The 500-Million-Year History of the Human Brain"
Clip #3: "Our Fishy Brains"
Clip #4: "Amazing Places, Amazing Fossils: Tiktaalik"
Clip #5: "Meet Your Cousins: Squirrel Monkeys"
Clip #6: "Lucy"
Clip #7: "Ancient Hands, Ancient Tools"
Clip #8: "What Can Fossil Teeth Tell Us?"
Clip #9: "How Do We Know When Our Ancestors Lost Their Tails?"

Related Links
Check your local PBS listings
Purchase the 'Your Inner Fish' book @ Amazon.com



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I haven't read the book.
 

kehs

Banned
One random guy starts talking about evolution and not the primordial ooze floodgates burst?


Thank you NDT.
 

Yagharek

Member
I would also recommend The Rise of Animals which is a BBC series with Sir David Attenborough. It charts the evolution of invertebrates and includes some incredible fossils from China.

Looking forward to this one, though I think I'll get the book too.

Why have we still got fish?
 

Zoc

Member
So this is completely free of any mention of creationism in the name of "equivalency?" That warms my heart. Understanding our own origins through science is one of the greatest achievements of humanity.
 
Playing around with the website, and I never knew this:

Hiccups are caused by a misfiring of ancient nerve wiring. In our ancestors who breathed in both air and water, these nerves controlled a reflex that closed the top of the windpipe to direct water over the gills and prevent it from entering the lungs. Sometimes today, those nerves revert to this ancient firing pattern, causing a quick inspiration of breath followed by closure of the top of the windpipe — a hiccup.
From the "Find Your Inner Fish" Quiz
 

BocoDragon

or, How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Realize This Assgrab is Delicious
I ain't born from no trout!

Awesome they are going to touch on dentition. The history of teeth is one of my favorite bedtime stories.

I always got sent to dentition for disrespecting the teacher :(
 
Just another friendly reminder: the first episode should be airing tonight at 10pm EST, after episodes of Nature and NOVA (which are pretty awesome shows to watch all on their own).
 

Fusebox

Banned
I bought the book a few years ago after seeing the author on the Colbert Report. It's great to see they've made a TV series out of it, it deserves it.
 

happypup

Member
What a great start to this series. I really like that they are focusing on individual features like the hand, rather than jumping from organism to organism like most evolution documentaries. I wish they had more time than three one hour shows to work with.

I hope they mention the origin of teeth before talking about the unique synapsid teeth features that we have to thank for our modern molars incisors and canines.
 

Nelo Ice

Banned
When's the next episode? Just watched the first and damn I learned a lot. This and Cosmos airing are freaking amazing. Gimme more educational science programs!. And I've said this before but damn I would have been all over science if these kinda of programs were available or shown to me as a kid. Instead I got shit science teachers that made me hate science coupled with my weakness in math to push me away even more :(.
 
When's the next episode? Just watched the first and damn I learned a lot. This and Cosmos airing are freaking amazing. Gimme more educational science programs!. And I've said this before but damn I would have been all over science if these kinda of programs were available or shown to me as a kid. Instead I got shit science teachers that made me hate science coupled with my weakness in math to push me away even more :(.
I don't mean to be a dick but pbs has been airing things more or less like this for like 40 years at least. It was around you just missed it :p It may not have have been as strictly as entertaining and with way less cg and fancier editing but the programming existed. I'm glad you found it now though!

Sucks about your teachers :( I'm sure they tried hard.
 

Nelo Ice

Banned
I don't mean to be a dick but pbs has been airing things more or less like this for like 40 years at least. It was around you just missed it :p It may not have have been as strictly as entertaining and with way less cg and fancier editing but the programming existed. I'm glad you found it now though!

Sucks about your teachers :( I'm sure they tried hard.
And I never bothered with PBS since there was nothing pushing me to watch it. I basically watched cartoons and my family is pretty religious so that may have played a part.The only science based show I can recall is Bill Nye who was awesome but it was more like yay something fun to watch instead of sitting in class doing schoolwork. Otherwise there were just boring old and corny videos that just made me want to sleep.

Also my teachers were cool I guess but either they were incompetent or the class was so dull that I only cared to do the minimum to pass since nothing seemed interesting. If I had learned of Sagan and Cosmos before it would have definitely piqued my interest like nothing before. Speaking of which I wish my school had astronomy as an elective since that would have sounded way more awesome than the incompetent teacher I got for chem who also taught physics.

Stuff like this is even evident today. My 16 year old cousin had no idea about the current Cosmos or that there was an original until I told her. Now she loves the show and wants to watch the original and learn about Sagan.
 
Nova was always pretty neat. I wouldn't call it corny and old at all.

Watch it sometime. If you like it there's hundreds of episodes for you to catch up on, and it covers more than science as well.

I think you're definitely overstating the effect cosmos WOULD have had. I'm glad you can appreciate it now, but your 6 year old self probably would have been bored with it considering it looks pretty corny (and ultimately kind of is) in plenty of places.
 

Nelo Ice

Banned
Nova was always pretty neat. I wouldn't call it corny and old at all.

Watch it sometime. If you like it there's hundreds of episodes for you to catch up on, and it covers more than science as well.

I think you're definitely overstating the effect cosmos WOULD have had. I'm glad you can appreciate it now, but your 6 year old self probably would have been bored with it.

True maybe I do appreciate Cosmos more now but it seems lots of people here on GAF and elsewhere were heavily influenced by watching it as kids. I think it would have had an effect on me since otherwise I lived in a religious bubble or I thought I was just too stupid for anything science or math based.

Edit: Also questioning things and a bunch of things I'm interested in now never really manifested until I was done with HS and found GAF lol. And in turn I'm now trying to spread all this science to everyone I know. So far only like 2 people I know have bothered to watch Cosmos. Anyway kinda ranting now, but I'm just glad now that I found about these shows and that they're available now. I also just got Pale Blue Dot and Demon Haunted World along with Contact all of which I need to get to reading.
 

Damaniel

Banned
But aren't they going to give creationists equal time to 'teach the controversy'? ;)

I didn't even know this was playing. Now I have to go find and watch it. Multiple pro-science programs on broadcast TV at the same time, in AMERICA? Who would have thought?
 

happypup

Member
But aren't they going to give creationists equal time to 'teach the controversy'? ;)

I didn't even know this was playing. Now I have to go find and watch it. Multiple pro-science programs on broadcast TV at the same time, in AMERICA? Who would have thought?

Evolution is actually getting accepted into society pretty quickly. Half the US accepts it in only 150 years. It took quite a bit longer for other similarly Earth shattering revelations.
 

happypup

Member
So I saw this while googling Your Inner fish and thought I would leave it here.

A refutation of the evolutionary 'myths' in Your Inner Fish by a creationist.

Mitchell then tackled Shubin’s claim that the location of the male reproductive organ on the outside in humans is evidence is another indication that “flaws in the human body, like our susceptibility to hernias, remind us that we’re all adapted from ancient ancestors; we are, every one of us, just a jury-rigged fish.”

She found “several problems with that statement,” foremost among them — that it contradicted the Bible. “God designed a perfect human body along with a perfect world in the beginning,” she wrote.

“How do we know? He told us so in Genesis 1:31. And God warned Adam that rebellion would have consequences (Genesis 2:16–17). Adam did rebel and ever since that day the entire world has groaned (Romans 8:22) under sin’s curse. People’s bodies have worn down, gotten ill, and died. The problem is neither bad design nor evolutionary bondage, but the perversion of God’s good original designs as a consequence of man’s rebellion against the Creator.”

No wonder they don't have any positive scientific evidence, it is all they can do just to keep up with refuting new evidence for evolution.
 
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