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The inner fish book
The inner fish book






the inner fish book

It’s approachable to readers without scientific backgrounds. I found this book to be readable and informative. There are line drawings throughout to help clarify the subject, many of these show analogous structures between various creatures. That’s alright the evolution of the brain is surely a book or more unto itself. A final chapter looks at what our evolutionary history means for our present-day lives (particularly what systematic problems the process has left us, from hernias to heart disease.) The book covers many of the structures that define us as human, but notably excludes the ultimate defining factor: our relatively gigantic brains. Then the book goes on to explain the development of limbs, genes, teeth, heads, anatomical plans, and the various sense organs.

the inner fish book

The first chapter provides an overview and tells the story of the search for and discovery of the Tiktaalik. One bone,… two bones,… a series of small blobs…” For example, “All creatures with limbs, whether those limbs are wings, flippers, or hands, have a common design. Shubin spends more of his time talking about the evidence in terms of specific anatomical detail. A fine example of this can be seen in the quote, “If digging in 600 year-old rocks, we found the earliest jellyfish lying next to the skeleton of a woodchuck, then we would have to rewrite our texts.” Needless to say, no such discovery has been made, and the layers of rock remain an orderly record of the progress of life from simple to increasingly complex. However, the book goes beyond these stories to unshroud the development of the arms, hands, heads, and sense organs that lead to our own structure.Īlong the way, the author does an excellent job of clearly presenting the overwhelming evidence in support of Darwinian evolution. Shubin also uses his experiences in cadaver dissection to elucidate some of his points.

the inner fish book

The book does tell the paleontological detective story involved in tracking down the Tiktaalik. Professor Shubin’s discovery of one of the earliest fish (the Tiktaalik) to survive at the fringes of land makes him well placed to delve into this topic. University of Chicago paleontologist / anatomist, Neil Shubin, charts the progression of life that ultimately leads to the human body. Your Inner Fish: A Journey into the 3.5-Billion-Year History of the Human Body by Neil Shubin








The inner fish book