No Such Thing As A Fish - 223: No Such Thing As A Worthless Doorstop
Episode Date: June 29, 2018Live from Melbourne, Dan, James, Anna and Andy discuss death by meteorite, the Manhatt-ant and the downhill history of the slinky....
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello and welcome to another episode of No Such Thing as a Fish, a weekly podcast this
week coming to you live from Melbourne.
My name is Dan Schreiber and I am sitting here with Anna Tysinski, Andrew Hunter Murray,
James Harkin and once again we have gathered round the microphones with our four favorite
facts from the last seven days and in no particular order here we go.
Starting with you, James.
Okay my fact this week is that the only known modern death due to meteorite was a cow who
was hit in the neck in Venezuela in 1972.
We didn't know about it for a decade because the farmer ate the cow and used the meteorite
as a doorstop.
It's amazing.
So this is a thing that happened in Venezuela in a town that I don't know how to pronounce.
It's T-R-U-J-I-L-L-O.
Prujo.
Was that a Zorro impression?
Yeah.
It was good.
So there was a sonic boom one night and then the next morning they found the dead cow and
the rock and they kind of thought nothing more about it but then ten years later a doctor
came along and he checked out this rock and realized that it was a meteorite and he said
this is definitely a meteorite that's killed the cow and that's the only one.
There's a lot of kind of possible people who've been killed or things that have been killed
by meteorites but this is the only one with an actual certificate that says that's what
it is.
Really?
And did he just look at his doorstop after all those years and go, well that actually
does look a bit like a meteorite.
I mean how does it transpire that someone suddenly decides to take their doorstop to a science
museum?
I think it was that the doctor was visiting them rather than them taking just every single
bit of rock from the house randomly to a museum.
Is this one?
No.
Is this one?
No.
You get lucky in the end.
But then some people are a little bit skeptical about it actually because what they realized
is because this is now a famous meteorite because it killed a cow it's now worth ten
times more than it was originally.
Now they're thinking maybe there's something dodgy going on here.
And then there's another twist so around the same area actually in Chile in the Atacama
there was a large meteorite landed there and a load of people collected it and this was
a really famous one and it landed in a dry riverbed called Vaca Muerta.
How do you, sorry how do you pronounce that?
Vaca Muerta.
Sorry.
Whatever Andy just said means dead cow in Spanish and so the theory is that maybe these
people heard about this famous one and they went that gives me an idea I'm going to pretend
my cow got hit like that and then when anyone comes I'll have the rock but then I can say
oh no I ate the cow.
Right.
I'll check that.
But don't they, they do test these rocks right?
Oh yeah you can tell if a meteorite is a meteorite.
Yeah so they test is rock?
I mean presumably they did.
Yeah so the meteorite is definitely a meteorite but the question is did it kill the cow or
not?
That's what some people are skeptical about.
Right okay I see.
Have you guys heard of the Nakla meteorite which fell on Egypt in 1911?
Nope.
So the story is that it vaporized a dog.
Oh yes but that is very much the story of it as if there's no evidence because obviously
the dog was vaporized.
Which is what makes people think it's not quite true.
I read a really cool story that people used to think that Venus fly traps were aliens
traveling on meteorites that landed on earth because back in the day Venus-
What Dan what are you on about?
No this is, I read this on the BBC's website back in the day what they used to, because
Venus fly traps would be very unpredictable and where they came up and they would go to
places where they would think a meteorite had landed and very often they would see out
of place Venus fly traps and it looks like an alien and so they thought it's an alien.
It only looks like an alien because we've designed alien things after it, like movies
and stuff like that.
Yeah actually our aliens look like Venus fly traps, you're right, it's that way around
isn't it?
Yep.
But they did, people used to attribute.
Sorry Dan, but we're fine with vaporizing dog story over here.
Yeah that was a very sad story, it's a poor dog.
People make money out of meteorites and like you were saying people would pay to come and
see various cows and anything that's been touched by a meteorite or experienced a meteorite
could then be sold so there was one that smashed through a car in New York in 1992, smashed
through the boot of the car, the trunk of the car and the owner of the car had just bought
it for $400 and she was able to sell it for 25 times that amount straight afterwards and
she was also able to sell the original title to the car from when she bought it and a bulb
from the rear tail light that had been blasted out by the meteorite.
Wow, that's so cool.
So it just wasn't.
I emailed the secretary of the American Meteorological Society, this is the people who look after
meteorites and ask them what to do if I find the meteorite and they said the protocol for
collecting meteorites ideally a fresh meteorite should be collected immediately without touching
it and placed in a plastic sealed bag, how do you do that without touching it?
It's the same procedure as for a dog poo, I imagine.
And then you hang it up on a tree and wait for the authorities to come in.
And you don't have the dog anymore because it's been vaporized.
Do you guys know there are about 20 full time meteorite hunters in the world?
Very rare career to have and I think it was I think it was National Geographic.
They interviewed one of them.
He was a guy called Michael Farmer.
He has been imprisoned for months in Oman because he went there.
He knew a meteorite had landed.
He went to try and find it and they locked him up saying you're not allowed to take rocks
out of Oman, but he's been nearly killed.
But the one thing he said in this interview, which I really liked was he said, I've eaten
a small piece of every moon rock and Mars rock that I have purchased or found.
Not many people can say they have eaten a piece of the moon.
And then he said, and I know for a fact that numerous scientists have done the same.
Do you think that you don't check in to see if it tastes of cheese?
But I think you wouldn't you would do that when you you give it a lick at least.
Yes, I would want to see what it tasted like.
But I wouldn't eat a small bit of the moon.
It feels somehow disrespectful.
So who the goddess Salini?
Yeah, actually, that's what you do, isn't it?
With fossils and stuff, isn't it?
If you're not sure if you've got fossilized dinosaur poo, for instance,
you can lick it and it'll be slightly tacky to your tongue.
Really? Come on.
It's a long time since he's been in a dinosaur game.
If you find a plastic bag hanging up on a tree
and you're not sure if it's a meteorite, do not do that.
Well, that's like farmers eat their soil, didn't they?
Sometimes some farmers test their taste, their soil to see if it's fertile.
And then the other way is by sitting down with your bare bottom on the soil.
Yes. What's that for?
If it sits just for show.
It's like to check if it's warm enough.
Yeah, so the soil is warm enough if you drop your trousers, sit on it
and it does not sort of soar.
Does anyone do that?
No, so it's not a common practice these days, but.
Although I keep a pair of underpants buried in my back garden.
We all do that.
Why do you do that?
This was official advice from someone or other, not to me, like to farmers.
And the idea is you put your underpants in your back garden
and then you go back a few months later and you check if they've been eaten away
by all the microbes and stuff.
And you'll always know because the microbes can't eat the elastic band
around the side of it, but they can eat the cotton.
And the purpose to see how.
I mean, no, like if the bacteria have eaten them, then what?
Then you've got good soil and you can plant stuff.
And if they haven't, then you have to put some fertilizer in.
Also, you've got a free thong at that point.
So I was reading, you know, in movies, how there's always it,
like a sci-fi movie will start in Antarctica and a meteorite has landed.
And and it always, Antarctica always seems to be associated
with finding big meteorites.
And I thought I was like, is that because of the poles
and it attracts as the meteorites coming in?
And then I read this article, it turns out the reason they go there
is because they're much easier to find because everything's white.
So they just stick out.
Is that amazing?
I thought it was like some deep, amazing alien life kind of thing.
No, it's just like, oh, there it is. Way easier.
So much more simple than trekking through a forest full of rocks.
It's true.
Also, not many humans there and other people to disturb it, right?
Yeah, because they're black, aren't they meteorites?
That's sort of lessons on how to spot them.
And so another place where it's really common for meteorites to be found is Morocco.
So for a country of its size, it's got like by multiple factors of 10
more meteorite findings than any other country of its size in the world.
And this is just because this guy in 2006 decided to start teaching people
how to spot a meteorite and it's become a proper career
for a lot of the nomadic people in Morocco.
They go around finding meteorites.
So a lot of them make money out of this and it's actually where
the most important meteorite probably ever found was found.
It was one that came from Mars.
It was in 2011 and it's like this whole jumble of rocks are thrown together.
And also it's kind of full of old Mars water.
So it's the first kind of evidence that we have of that.
But the the cool story about this is that it was found by this guy who had
lessons that they have in Morocco on how to spot a meteorite.
And he saw it.
I think it was on sale in a market.
It's called the Black Beauty Stone now.
But it was on sale in a market and he looked at it.
He was tempted and then he said, no, no, I'm not going to buy it.
He drove away. He changed his mind.
He drove back and then he bought it and he was driving.
He was on his way back from the hospital from having a gallstone removed.
So he had one stone removed and then he immediately got another stone.
Yeah, you're saying this in the way that Dan says things sometimes.
I thought it sounded like that.
Is that what I sound like?
I am so sorry.
Hey, we need to move on shortly.
You guys got anything before we do?
Can I give you a list of other things that have been used as door stops over the years?
Yeah, sure.
It is unbelievable how careless people are.
So it's just like everything valuable you've ever heard of.
In 2016, a Chinese vase being used as a door stop was suddenly sold for
$160,000.
In 2014, a Chinese pot sold for $150,000.
A Ming vase in 2012 sold for a million.
The world's largest sapphire in 1947 was found in Queensland.
It had been used as a door stop for nine years until the owner looked a bit closer.
A Bronze Age dagger that was worth $50,000.
In 1802, a lump of gold had been used as a door stop for three years
and the jeweler who was visiting this house saw it
and it sparked America's very first gold rush, so in North Carolina.
And finally, a can of tinned veal that was left in the Arctic by William Parry, the explorer, in 1825.
It was rediscovered by another explorer in 1829
and used as a door stop for many, many years
and finally opened in 1958.
Yeah, it got that reaction I think from the people who opened it as well.
Okay, it is time for fact number two and that is my fact.
My fact this week is that there is a unique species of ant
that only lives in ten blocks of New York City.
They call it the Manhattan.
So, this was sent in to me actually by a guy called Justin Hintz
and it was that this biologist discovered this species of ant
which lives between 63rd Street and 76th Street in New York
which is in Broadway, in Broadway, Manhattan.
And they were looking at it and they noticed that it was unlike any of the 13,000 other species of ants
that have ever been catalogued.
They thought it might have come from Europe but they can't trace it to any known ant
so they've got this one city dwelling that has evolved to be its own species and Manhattan.
So, you look at an ant and then immediately access your mental catalogue
of all the 13,000 other ants and just eliminate them all.
Unless it has something extremely different.
It had an extra leg.
It was driving one of the yellow cabs, that's what that hasn't said.
Get out of here!
So, they eat so much junk food and the scientist who was studying this
said that the Pavement Ant eats so much,
shifting their diets to more human foods,
that it's actually changing the chemical makeup of their bodies to look more like humans.
Which, sadly, is not as exciting a sentence as I thought it was.
I think they mean internally as opposed to like, got a face.
Ants have got faces, surely?
Oh, but just imagine like my face on an ant.
Yeah, and they don't get diabetes though, so that's a thing that separates them.
So, what other ants get diabetes do they?
No, what?
Compared to the humans who are eating all the fast food, I think was your point, right?
Yeah, they're very good at digesting it.
Fast food is actually sort of made for ants, it turns out.
Exactly, not for us.
The coming human ants don't get diabetes so they can keep eating.
The scientist who did that, he was called Clint Penwick
and he was talking about the study, he was interviewed about it.
And he said, when he was doing the study, nobody ever talked to me.
I basically was walking around and then crouching down on the ground
and huffing something off the sidewalk through this ridiculous looking device.
And not a single New Yorker was like, hey, what are you doing?
I guess I was not the weirdest person on the street.
Now, that suggests to me that he was the weirdest person on the street.
You don't tend to talk to the weirdest person on the street, mate.
That's not what everyone does.
Well, New York has a few other species, doesn't it?
They're so unique to it.
They have a unique centipede, they have a sweet bee,
they have a white-footed mouse with small ears.
They also found in New York in 2014 the first new amphibian
that's been found in the state for 150 years,
so a frog, a leopard frog.
And so for more than a century, there's been two types of leopard frog
living in New York and people have been arguing over it.
Scientists have been arguing because there seemed to be so much variety
in the different leopard frogs.
There was this big debate that went on and apparently lots of discord
and backlash from one scientist to another about theories
as to how come there was so much variation with these two species.
And a herbatologist in 1936 called Carl Cofield said,
actually, I think this two species might be three species
and it caused such massive controversy and there was this bickering
and all this strife that people refused to accept it in the scientific literature.
His theory was absolutely rubbish.
That was 1936 and then in 2014 we went, oh, yeah, he was right.
There was another one.
So quite sweetly, it's called the Rana Calfeldi after him.
But presumably he's long dead.
Long dead, yeah, but he's somewhere, he's happy.
Right.
I think it's another New York discovered insect.
So this is an insect that doesn't live in New York,
but it was discovered by a New York scientist
and it is a new type of beetle and they didn't know it existed,
but they discovered it because it was attached to an ant
and what it does is this beetle, when it wants to get to places,
it goes up to this ant and it bites onto its anus
and it grips on and flips underneath.
So the thorax, it's in between the thorax and the abdomen,
abdomen, abdomen, abdomen, abdomen.
Sure.
Oh, sorry.
Abdomen.
Thank you.
So they were studying this ant and they were like,
it's got two of those and they shouldn't and they shook it
and the beetle fell off and that's what it did.
This beetle has a unique way of transporting itself
by biting the bum of the ant and getting...
So does the ant just think it's got two bums?
The ant doesn't seem to have an issue with it, yeah.
I don't know.
So ants are pretty amazing.
I really like this ant.
I'd never heard of it.
It's called the Azteca brevis and it's in Costa Rica
and it catches prey that's more than 50 times as heavy
and as large as it is and it does this by...
So they all work together and they nest in a tree
but they build this network of tunnels within the tree
with tiny little openings out through the tree bark
that are just big enough to fit the little ants' heads
and so it looks a little bit like holy cheese,
like Swiss cheese or something and their heads poke out
and then a big bit of prey will come along
like a termite or something
and will step on one of the holes
one of its legs will fall into the hole
and the ant will bite the leg with its teeth so it's stuck
and then this thing kind of struggles to get away
and another leg falls into another hole
and another ant bites its other leg
and eventually all its legs end up in the holes
with ants' teeth biting into it
and then the other ants all emerge and tear it to pieces
and have it for dinner.
But so it's sort of spread-eagled on this tree.
Is there a happy ending at all to this story?
If you're an ant.
Oh sure.
It's a hell of a nice story.
That's really horrific.
Just stuck there, sprawled out.
It's like the scene in the zombie film
where all the hands come through the wall.
I haven't seen that scene but it sounds like it is like that.
I found an ant called Cericomirix amebulis
and it's a farmer ant so it farms fungi
it literally makes little scrapings
and grows fungi to eat.
But there's another species which is called
megalomermic sematicus and it comes in
it comes into the first ants colony
it doesn't do any work
it lives in the colony
it eats the fungus the first ant has made
and it also eats the babies that the host is rearing
and the hosts do nothing about it
they don't take any defensive action.
That is not much of a house guest, is it?
No.
And then he stole their precious doorstop
and fucked up.
Yeah there was nothing in the fridge
I hope you don't mind so I ate the baby
but there's a reason that it's tolerated
and the reason is that second ant
contains a venom in its body
which helps to repel an even worse
invader ant.
What is that guy doing though?
What is worse than eating the babies?
I think maybe those guys just completely destroy
I don't know they might destroy the nest or something
but yeah so they have to put up with these
really difficult guests because they know
that it's protecting them against something worse.
I was reading an article in a Cosmos magazine
about ants and I'll just read the start of that
in a behaviour that finds a broad comparison
with human tradition
a genus known as turtle ants
pass on possessions from older individuals
directly to younger ones
in a mechanism that does not however
find a human analogue
they do so through their anuses.
Wait wait wait what about that
scene in pulp fiction with a guy who
puts the watch up his anus?
I haven't seen that film but
Well someone must know what I'm talking about
There was definitely one guy up there
who got it immediately
Exactly, Christopher Walken puts a watch up his anus
then gives it to his son
so actually there isn't analogue in humans.
So these turtle ants basically
it's like a fecal transplant
that the adults give to the babies
and basically if you
don't get that fecal transplant
from your parents then you would starve
because you wouldn't have the right bacteria in your stomach
so they do need it
Oh wow
So there's a story with a happy ending
but a gross middle
There was going to be a really exciting game
there was a kick-started game
that reached funding and it was called Ant Simulator
and it was a
it sounded really cool so basically
you would manage an ant colony
like you would be the main ant
like get over there
This is one of these New York ants
So it looked really amazing
and it had I think three people
who were like the main people behind it
and unfortunately it's not happening
and the reason is because they captured it
I think perfectly in the headline
Ant Simulator cancelled after
team spends the money on booze and strippers
two of them went off
had a massive night
and they had to make a video going
I'm so sorry Ant Simulator can't happen anymore
and we can't give you back your money either
That is typical entomologist behaviour
you know they're always doing that kind of thing
can't be trusted
We're going to have to move on soon
to our next fact
They fake injury ants
to get sympathy
so they carry their injured home
and ants have figured this out
This is the Ronaldo ant isn't it
I've seen this
It just grazes a leaf and it goes
I am so impressed that you knew the name
of any football player
So the Ronaldo ant
ants if they're injured they carry each other
home and so some ants really over emphasize
injuries so it was found ants
have been witness moving really really slowly
or limping or falling over
I don't know how an ant falls over but they do
in the hope of being carried
but then if no one helps they look around
and they get back up and they walk on like nothing's happened
Okay let's move on
It is time for fact number three
and that is Czazinski
My fact this week is that the
slinky business almost went
bankrupt because the slinkies inventor
kept giving the proceeds away to religious cults
It's amazing
Yeah so this is it
The slinky was invented by a guy called Richard James
who was an engineer it was invented in
1943
He worked on a navy shipyard and he was working on a bit
of equipment and noticed some springs
acting oddly walking
and so he said to his wife I think I can
make a toy out of this and it was
huge and it sold out
and he got very rich and then
he turned to religion
Christianity to be specific and
he started giving away all this money
and his wife was like oh my god
we were almost broke we were almost completely
out of money because he just gave it all away
to various cults and then
he ran away to Bolivia to join one of them
in 1960 and
did not speak to or see his family again
all the slinky
He did occasionally
write letters to his wife Betty
urging her to repent so that is something
Yes
So the invention
was an amazing invention and it caught on
quite quickly with the initial batch
he sold something like 490 minutes
once all they had to do was bring it
to the front of a store and just show people
it going down a couple of steps and it just
everyone was like gotta have it
and then there was a few years where it just
he needed to get it manufactured and people
wouldn't buy into it but he
not only invented the slinky he invented
the machine that makes the slinky
in a quick sort of like
mass product way so
a slinky and I don't know if it's still to this day
the same length but the original slinkies
that he made if it was the coil was
laid out just straight as a coil
80 feet long each slinky
he created a machine that coiled it up
in 10 seconds and then it was good
to go so he has a patent for
an invention as well as the toy invention
that's cool the patent for the original
slinky said that it could be used as
both a child's amusement and for
parlor games
okay so I couldn't work out
what parlor games there might be
but I went on to the internet and apparently
there was once a game that was sold called
slinkum and it was like
a little ramp and it had
boxes at the bottom like squares
and you would put your slinky down the ramp
on whichever square it stopped in that's the number of points you got
and obviously they weren't
that confident about how good a game it was
because the rules
offers a bounty of $25 for anyone
offering a suggestion of an improvement
of the game
that's amazing
so good
do you know what the quality control is
in the slinky factory
they test
whether or not they can walk into their own box
if they can do that
then they're a high quality slinky
I think they put
the boxes at the bottom of the stairs
and their final challenge
that is amazing
if it's too tight or too loose, won't walk in
another weird thing is that
so he invented this while
he was working for the war effort
the side project as Anna was saying
found a toy when it fell off the thing
so what he was doing just on that
there was like a meter
which would tell you the horsepower of the
ship that he was on and he needed
the dampening system to stop it from bouncing around
everywhere so he was using springs to do that
and then this spring happened to be great
at doing other things
so he saw that and he made it as a toy
no intention for use of war
then years later the Vietnam war
happened and slinkies were actually used in the war
because what they were fantastic at doing was
if you were stuck in the middle of nowhere
you would throw a slinky up into a tree
and it could act as a sort of
antenna for radio signals
that you needed to be sending
so it ended up becoming
an actual use for war
no way, that's so cool
way
wow
here's a use for a slinky
you can use it to get rid of squirrels
uh-huh
you put a squirrel on one
and then send it down the stairs
no you don't do that
and then it goes into its box
and you slam the lid shut
now what you do is you put it on your bird feeder
and then when the squirrel
comes along he kind of grabs on to the slinky
and the weight pulls the slinky down
and he's kind of pulled down in like a little
elevator ride
there are videos online aren't there
they are unbelievable
hours of fun
so when you drop a slinky
the bottom
doesn't know that you let go of the top
at first
this is true
I don't think it even knows it's a slinky
this is my Dan fact of the show
and I'm playing it now
check it out, go home
go to the slinky cupboard and check it out
so it looks like it's floating
the bottom looks like it's floating because
of the tension spring
you're holding the slinky
not scrunched up right
so you're holding the very tip of it
so it's really dangling down a long way
your squirrels just come off the bottom
exactly, it's loose at the bottom
and when you let go of the
as you say the top bands
it takes time for the motion to tell
the bottom of the slinky that the top
and the tension have been released
you're not a physicist are you Andy
not by trade
but I've read
I couldn't quite believe this
I've read that this happens even to solid objects
so if you drop a steel rod
the top starts accelerating
before the bottom does
because the vibrations need to travel down
it's basically the tension
is pulling up at the same rate
as the gravity is pushing down
so the tension, once you've released it with your hand
it needs to travel down the slinky
before the slinky nose at the bottom
oh that tension has been released now
it is amazing, you should watch it on YouTube
the slinky, it just levitates
the bottom just levitates
there's a very good video on the Veritasium YouTube channel
wow
do you make that channel
and yeah, it's incredible
it's magic
it's magic, you just ruined all the science of it
I think we should say about the slinky
but the hero behind it wasn't the guy who made it
and then turned to a Bolivian cult
and there was his wife Bessie
who was the person who saved it
so she became determined to make it work
and she made this 450 mile
weekly round trip
to the factory
and pumped all their remaining money into it
she gambled their entire mortgage
on a toy show in 1963 in New York
hoping that people would go for it
she launched the advertising campaign
she gave it a jingle
and she suddenly built from her ruined marriage
this great little toy
and I think she
might have been her idea to do the dog
because the dog really gave it a boost
and a train as well
so the dog is pictured toy story in your head
and the slinky dog
that's literally it
and when the movie came out
they weren't prepared for the fact that it was going to be massively popular
so they didn't have the quantities
that they need for merchandise
to come out at that point
which seems impossible as a thought, doesn't it
they did a range of things
which were all slinkies in the middle
and then other things at the front of the back
so they did the dog, they did the train
there was also a caterpillar, a hippo
a fire engine, a worm and several more
but they all had the
they were all the same thing
you can buy at the moment
you can buy sound effects slinky
for $12.99
and as it goes down it makes a sound
splat, boing and thwap
but I kind of think the sound is quite nice anyway
isn't it what a slinky makes
so for $153.99
by a 14 carat gold
plated slinky
just to keep your door open
we're going to have to move on soon
to our next fact
I was just looking at some other toys
Mr Potato Head
the original Mr Potato Head
did not come with the Potato Head
it was just the bits on his face
so it's got
and it was just like bits of moustache
in fact I think the original one came with
hands, feet, ears, two mouths, two
pesevies, four noses, three hats
eyeglasses and a pipe
and some felt for the moustache
but the idea was you should use one of your own potatoes
so
you should put it in a real potato
I think I actually remember having one of those
with an actual potato
unless you're going to tell me it was in the 1920s
I think you might be lying
about how old you are James
now I haven't written down the date here
but I think it was in the early 70s
when they decided that
I was alive in the late 70s so
do you remember
they decided that the pins needed
to jab into a potato were too sharp
and contravened health and safety
so you could no longer stick it into a real potato
so they had to come with a plastic potato
really? do you know who invented paint by numbers?
I love that though
it was Michelangelo
not the turtle
not the turtle
he's a party dude
he used to assign sections
of his ceilings for his students to paint
and the way that he would do it
is he put numbers there so they knew what to paint
but the modern one started in 1952
and Macy started selling this
and a few months later it became massive
because an amateur painter won third prize
at a San Francisco art competition
by doing just the paint by numbers
wow
and the press coverage just said
that no one could tell the difference between real painting
and this and then it became absolutely huge
wow
that's so, I can't believe Michelangelo did that
that's really funny
he ruined his own profession in a way
because once you're painting by numbers anyone can do it
and that's why there are no artists around today
is because we're all just doing paint by numbers
um
okay should we move on to our final fact of the show
it's time for a final fact of the show
and that is
Andy
my fact is that when zebras are running away from a lion
they fart loudly with every stride
and who's to say Andy that you wouldn't do exactly the same thing
in that situation
sure I would
but they're quite gassy animals
and the
motion propels the gasses out of their bodies
when they start running
just push them forward quicker
and you can hear them from quite a long way away
so this is
there's a new book out and it's called
does it fart
and it's by
Nick Caruso and Danny Rabioti
and it's an absolutely fantastic book
so they're scientists and they started collecting animals
and writing little essays
about whether or not those animals fart
and it was a spreadsheet
that turned into a book, which is my favourite kind of book
and they just got
information about all kinds of things
so there are termites in there
there are dinosaurs, dinosaurs the ruling is
not anymore
there's a thing about termites
the amazing thing about termites
termites each produce one half of one
millionth a gram of methane
per day
however, unfortunately there are so many termites
that they produce
between, this is a wide range
so steady on, but they produce
between 5 and 19%
of methane emissions globally
between what and what
5 and 19
that's a lot guys
kill them, this is why the answer
finds a kill them
that's your answer to every problem
well
I've got a very hawkish approach
to termites
it does sound like an incredible book
so a couple of other things is
sloths don't fart
so most animals do fart
because their digestion is so slow
like all the rest of them
they would take them so long to work through the farting process
that the gases would build up inside them
and would become poisonous
and so instead they are reabsorbed
by the intestines into their bloodstreams
and then those gases are taken up to their lungs
and they breathe them out instead
so
I desperately want to know what a slow
breath smells like
the early morning used to be called
sparrow fart
which was just the time of day
you know sparrow fart, it's so early that
the sparrows are farting, I suppose
but think about that, sparrows don't fart
do they not?
is that true of all birds?
or no birds fart?
why do they not fart?
they've got very short intestines
and they poo very frequently
and the main reason is that they
so the reason you fart is that you have a build up of gas
which is due to gas forming bacteria in your gut
I think we may have mentioned that before
so humans and mammals do have those bacteria and birds don't
so that's the reason they don't
I was checking if humans
might fart if they're being chased by stuff
and James has been to the zoo today
and I went on to runnersworld.com
and apparently
this is a problem that lots of runners have
that are farting a lot while they're running
right?
and they say that the reason is all that
people have told me
people have told me that's true
I felt as I was agreeing with that
that it was too enthusiastic
so anyway, apparently what it is
is heavy breathing
you're taking in a lot of gas
and it has to go somewhere
and that's what happens
and you need to poo as well
runners diarrhea is a serious problem
on running forums
hey
does anyone else feel like they're at a help group?
sorry
I forgot everyone was here
okay, I do have a question
and I'm not a physicist but I do have this question
if you're running
and you break wind
let's say you're running at 12 miles an hour
and you break wind
at 4 miles an hour
out the other way
I presume that the wind that you break
is still travelling at 8 miles an hour
in your wake
okay, I've got a lot to tell you about relativity
that's correct
we'll do it after the show
alright, I think that works
one of the good farting animal
is the pupfish
so I think this is in the book as well
but it eats algae but it has
such high levels of gas in it
that the pupfish's stomach inflates
fully inflates and it floats to the top of the water
and that's a really really bad place for it to be
because it exposes it to lots of predators
so the moment the pupfish has
a meal of algae
it has to fart to save its own life
so it pops straight up to the top
and is desperately trying to expel wind
constantly to sink back down again
it's extremely stressful
it's a race to the bottom for then
maybe some stuff on zebras
here's an amazing thing about zebras
when they're being chased by a lion
not only do they do what you said
but they only run about half the top speed
when they're being chased by a lion
so basically what happens is
if you're going at your top speed
and you're running it's really easy for the lion
or whatever to tell where you're going to be
in like two strides time
so what they do is they go at half of their speed
and then when the lion gets anywhere near them
they just go in a different direction
and then they go really fast
and then they'll slow down to half their speed again
and then wait until the lion gets to them
and then speed off really quickly again
that's smart that isn't it
very clever
did you read about this ridiculous story
in episode 111
where some farmers brought
in the UK bought a Shetland pony
you know a really small pony
and then they were surprised
when they woke up one morning
and they went out into the field
and there was their Shetland pony in there
but also a tiny tiny zebra
and it was because
they hadn't realised they'd bought a pregnant Shetland pony
and they bought it from a wildlife sanctuary
where it was sharing a field with a zebra
what?
and then she was getting fatter
but it really was a bit of a shock
when we got up one morning
and we saw that full zebra was there
we realised then what had happened
that's...
I have a related fact to that
which is that I think it's in Georgia
there are dogs who are supposed to be guarding sheep
and they keep on having sex with the wolves
they're meant to be defending the sheep from
well I guess
it would put the wolves off
what they were supposed to be doing
is the seduction method
but they keep on...
and they keep testing the dogs as well
and finding out oh you're half wolf
because your parents were a wolf and a dog
that is amazing
but in the line of duty
James Bond does it all the time
he does
okay that is it
that is all of our facts
thank you so much for listening
if you would like to get in contact
with any of us about the things
that we have said over the course of this podcast
we can be found on our Twitter accounts
I'm on at Shriverland
Andy
at AndrewHunterM
James
at JamesHarkin
and Chazinsky
you can email podcast at qi.com
or you can go to our group account
which is at no such thing
or go to our Facebook page
no such thing as a fish
or our website
no such thing as a fish.com
we have all of our previous episodes up there
all of our future tour dates
and a link to our books
so please do go there
thank you so much guys
we'll be back again next week
goodbye