wedonot: (This is a totally subtle metaphor.)
Dr. Charles Xavier ([personal profile] wedonot) wrote2012-10-27 01:11 pm

THIRTY SIX ✖ VOICE

[Hi, Barge, someone else really doesn't want to talk about the flood, so Charles is taking this opportunity to talk more about science. Everyone loves science, especially when it's a distraction from things like promising your best friend you'd come rescue him from Auschwitz and sincerely meaning it because you're a telepath and can pretty much do what you want. :\

Science is generally easier to talk about than feelings. :c]


I'd imagine most of you are familiar with the concept of mass extinctions, wherein the population of all living things on Earth is decreased by over fifty percent. It is, after all, what helped propel mammals into being the dominant life forms on Earth after the dinosaurs went extinct. But despite the widespread devastation each time, some species do survive, and can remain largely unchanged since they originally evolved. The horseshoe crab, for example, is virtually identical to its relatives that have been preserved as fossils from several million years ago.

Others are considerably less well known and familiar to us, and some potentially have yet to even be rediscovered. Although it's quite rare to rediscover a species after it's been thought dead for thousands if not millions of years - for example, it's highly unlikely that a Brachiosaurus has escaped the attention of modern science while roaming the woods of North America - it has happened before.

One such species was considered extinct by the scientific community until December 23, 1938. Marjorie Courtenay-Latimer - a museum curator in South Africa - told local fishermen that if they ever found anything unusual in their hauls to call her in immediately. On this particular day, she was called down to the docks to investigate a captain's haul and discovered a five foot long fish with navy blue scales and white spots that looked like nothing she'd ever seen before. After hurrying the specimen back to the museum and preserving it as best she could after the local morgue refused to help preserve the body, she began to go through her books trying to locate the fish, but couldn't find any information about it. When a friend from Rhodes University was finally able to come look at the specimen, he immediately recognized it as a coelacanth, an ancient fish thought to have gone extinct since the end of the Cretaceous period. A population of fish had apparently been living on the east coast of Africa for potentially millions of years, largely unnoticed by human populations because they spend most of the day very deep under water. Occasionally a fish would be caught by a fisherman, but as the flesh is incredibly oily and often makes people sick, they were often tossed away as trash without a second thought. A second population was more recently discovered in Indonesia.

There are plenty of other examples of so called "living fossils", and Lazarus taxa, both plants and animal, but a discovery like this is generally unheard of, especially considering the coelacanth is generally considered to be a step in understanding how land based animals developed locomotion, as fossil evidence suggests that tetrapods evolved from fish whose fins eventually developed into legs and allowed them to walk out of the water and onto dry land. I've often wondered if another similar discovery might be made with further exploration. Living things are, after all, incredibly resilient, and we still haven't mapped the entirety of our planet's surface.

[Private to Steve]

Do you have a minute? There's something I need to discuss with you.

[Private to Jean]

Merlin tells me you two have been experimenting with the limits of your abilities.
sharpememory: (Hmm)

[personal profile] sharpememory 2012-10-29 11:45 pm (UTC)(link)
Genetics as in Isaac Newton? [Ah, Barron's memory.]
sharpememory: (Looking down)

[personal profile] sharpememory 2012-10-29 11:48 pm (UTC)(link)
Well, that monkey dude. Whatever his name was.
sharpememory: (Lol)

[personal profile] sharpememory 2012-10-29 11:57 pm (UTC)(link)
Okay, you're obviously just some sort of genius.
takeyouapart: (dubious | eh?)

Re: [Spam]

[personal profile] takeyouapart 2012-10-30 12:00 am (UTC)(link)
[This is new information, and his hands still on the wood carving.]

He - Arthur lectured you?
sharpememory: (Considering)

[personal profile] sharpememory 2012-10-30 12:06 am (UTC)(link)
Huh. Did you get tested for it and everything?
sharpememory: (Hmm)

[personal profile] sharpememory 2012-10-30 12:10 am (UTC)(link)
Yeah. I guess you would have known anyway, like how I didn't need a test to tell me that I have powers.
sharpememory: (Lol)

[personal profile] sharpememory 2012-10-30 12:13 am (UTC)(link)
I think you can probably guess.
takeyouapart: (dubious | :\)

[Spam]

[personal profile] takeyouapart 2012-10-30 12:15 am (UTC)(link)
[It sounded like he was trying to be helpful, supportive, in his occasionally tactless way. Of course, that was the flip side of being incredibly determined and tenacious - it's entirely possible to be tenacious about pursuing something that's a flat out bad idea.

But he doesn't say all that, because he expects Charles already knows.]


Well, that was unnecessary of him.
sharpememory: (Hmm)

[personal profile] sharpememory 2012-10-30 12:17 am (UTC)(link)
Seriously? Dude, that's insane. Where I come from, every power has blow back. Like people who can work emotions? End up a mess, like full on bipolar. Death workers lose fingers, get heart attacks and that. It's brutal.
aggravating: (number one with a bullet)

text; because this just needs to be even more of a mess

[personal profile] aggravating 2012-10-30 12:20 am (UTC)(link)
ding ding ding

got it in one
sharpememory: (Talking)

[personal profile] sharpememory 2012-10-30 12:20 am (UTC)(link)
No way except to not use your power ever, which is probably worse than any blow back you could get.
sharpememory: (Wait what)

text; :D

[personal profile] sharpememory 2012-10-30 12:20 am (UTC)(link)
Huh? But he said he was a Charles Darwin, not a shrink.
sharpememory: (Trolling in the deep)

[personal profile] sharpememory 2012-10-30 12:21 am (UTC)(link)
Hey, I'm cool with it. It's not like I ever forget anything important.

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