SciShow Tangents - Trick or Treat Month: Tombs with Siobhan Thompson!
Episode Date: October 3, 2023Trick or Treat Month returns... and this time it's personal! Join us for another month of spooky themes and special surprise guest apparitions! Try not to get too scared!This year's ghastly Grand Guig...nol of science and screams begins at the end: the tomb! And we dug up an old friend, Dimension 20's Siobhan Thompson, to guide us deep into the cursed catacombs of knowledge! SciShow Tangents is on YouTube! Go to www.youtube.com/scishowtangents to check out this episode with the added bonus of seeing our faces! Head to www.patreon.com/SciShowTangents to find out how you can help support SciShow Tangents, and see all the cool perks you’ll get in return, like bonus episodes and a monthly newsletter! A big thank you to Patreon subscribers Garth Riley and Glenn Trewitt for helping to make the show possible!And go to https://store.dftba.com/collections/scishow-tangents to buy some great Tangents merch!Follow us on Twitter @SciShowTangents, where we’ll tweet out topics for upcoming episodes and you can ask the science couch questions! While you're at it, check out the Tangents crew on Twitter: Ceri: @ceriley Sam: @im_sam_schultz Hank: @hankgreen
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello and welcome to SciShow Tangents, the frightly competitive science knowledge screamcase!
I'm your ghost hank gangrene and joining me this
week as always is mad scientist scary riley boo and our resident every wolf man sam skulls
hello good job buddy the old calendar on the wall says it's halloween time once more
and as you know we here at size show you, you may not though, but this is a thing. We here at SciShow Tangents love to get into that Halloween spirit. And this year is no different. October will be trick or treat month. And Sam and Sari have invited some ghoulish guests to SciShow Tangents Manor to join us this month. In fact, I hear one of them approaching now.
Ooh!
It's me!
A spooky ghost!
It's a comedian and writer and Dimension 20 player,
Siobhan Thompson.
Hello!
It's so good to see you again.
Thank you.
It's so good to see you too, my friend.
You're looking entirely different from the last time I saw you. It's so good to see you too, my friend. You're looking entirely different from
the last time I saw you. What happened? I moved all the hair from the top of the head to the
bottom part of the head. Very cool. That's the thing that all men have to go through at a certain
age, I feel like. You just hurried on the system a little bit earlier than perhaps.
So Siobhan and I actually played a game together. It was called Mentopolis. And it's a series, a season, I guess, of Dimension 20.
A series, if you're British, which you are.
Yes, I am.
And you can see it on Dropout TV and one episode on YouTube.
Sorry that there's a paywall for the rest of them.
Siobhan, you play a lot of games.
You play a lot of tabletop games specifically, professionally.
What's the best game I can play that doesn't require me to buy anything that I don't already
own?
It depends, I guess, on if you're playing on your own or you're playing with other people.
No, I got friends.
What do you think I am?
Okay, great.
Then I love a silly
little gambling game. Any kind of silly little gambling game is fun to me, especially one that
has almost no stakes. One of my favorite things to do at university, we play a lot of drinking
games at uni because A, you can drink legally in England, but B, also the culture in England is
when you're done for the day, you go to the pub and you go to the pub and you just sit with your friends for eight hours until they kick you out
play silly little gambling games yes exactly um so we used to play a game called 21
which is so stupid perfect for drinking because it gets you very drunk but also tests your memory
drunker you get the drunker you get.
It's one of those.
Exactly.
It starts off very simple.
It's called 21.
You just count around the table to 21.
And then the person that hits 21 drinks and makes up a rule.
So instead of saying the number five, you have to get up on the table and pluck like a chicken.
You could also say, instead of saying the number five, you have to get up on the table and pluck like a chicken. You could also say, instead of saying the number five,
you have to say the number six.
So you would go one, two, three,
four, six, six.
And if you mess it up,
you have to drink and then start
again. And then every time anybody
gets to the number 21, you get to make
a new rule.
I love it so much.
We have a happy hour after this recording because we have a new employee who's coming to visit.
And so we should go to Cranky Sam's and play 21 in Siobhan's honor and get me the drunkest I've been since I got cancer.
Hell yeah.
I don't like games where you have to make a spectacle of yourself because I feel like I'm going to bother other people, you know?
I'm fine making a spectacle of myself.
But if I feel like I'm intruding on other people's ability to'm fine making a spectacle of myself but if i feel
like i'm intruding on other people's ability to just have a nice evening then i can't anymore
i mean you don't have to it's also the nice thing about it is it's set up so that if the people you
are playing with are not the type of people who will happily in a bar stand up on a table and
look like a chicken you can just make the rules to fuck with them so it can just be instead of saying the number eight you have to say the alphabet backwards oh so every time you get
so that's not embarrassing you don't have to do anything social it's just really hard just an
infinite this is how i am so clever is i'll just look up some rules that other people make up for
the game and then i'll be like great do this one's fun. And I came up with it just now.
That's like,
I used to have a note in my phone for two truths and a lie,
because I'm so bad at thinking of things about myself on the spot.
And I'm like,
I already have,
Oh,
just off the top of my head here.
Oh,
we're doing two truths and a lie.
Yeah.
Real fast.
Yeah.
Every week here on tangents, we get together to try to unnerve disgust and horrify each other
with science facts sorry i didn't do anything halloweeny for the banter sam that's okay i was
trying to think of something but it's early september so it's kind of tough our panelists
are playing for gory and for candy which we will be awarding as we play. And at the end of the episode,
one of them will be crowned the king of Halloween. And if the guest is the treat of Trick or Treat
Month, here's the trick. Our regular panel will all take turns presenting games this month,
and I will be playing along. Now, as always, we introduce this week's topic with the traditional
science poem this week from Siobhan. This is an elegy to the bones I wrote
my project on for my third year class, Human Bones, because I have a degree in archaeology,
taught by Dr. Kate Robson Brown. Bones are dyed a gorgeous ochre red, all five foot three of them
or thereabout, from all the dirt that was your final bed or should have been
but some suburban lout obsessed with finding treasure dug you up and put you in a box to
study more your body in an overflowing cup of artifacts and remnants to explore so here i try
to puzzle out your life a woman's life i think but can't be sure. Did you know love's sweet, unending strife?
And were you kind or cruel or demure?
The only truth I know from your detritus is you had ankylosing spondylitis.
Hot damn, that was good.
We've got Edgar Allan Poe over here.
It was beautiful.
It was very creepy.
It felt like the rhyme scheme felt creepy for some reason. It shakespeare baby it's a shakespearean sonnet it here's the thing about the english education
system it's 95 poems and writing them and learning other people's poems off by heart
wow we don't have that yeah we have four percent as poetry and it's just and then the rest is like how to make a hot dog you know how to drill for oil how to drill for oil how to pay a lot of money
for health care that's what they teach two of those things seem much harder than the other one
they don't want you to think too hard about the health care one at all yeah no so what is your
what was your what was your degree in archaeology cool i was an archaeologist
for about a year after i graduated and very quickly realized like oh this is not for me
this is so hard it's such a hard job you're in the field uh you're covered in mud do we get do
we make the topic tombs knowing that siobhan was an archaeologist? Oh, yeah. I'm a real pro. Okay.
Okay.
I was like, that would be very weird.
But it's great that you have a spooky subject matter.
I have a spooky subject matter.
I've spookily dug up multiple drainage ditches, which is what you mostly find when you're an archaeologist.
Well, we got to redo the episode now.
Drainage ditches.
Yeah, ditches.
They're very spooky.
Can you tell us what tombs are?
I mean, kind of.
Siobhan can probably do it better than me or with more specificity.
But as far as I could find, tombs are a very general term.
There are lots of different structures or enclosures of various sizes where humans in the present or past put their dead. And sometimes
they're underground, sometimes they're above ground, sometimes they're just like a pile of
rocks. There are pyramids and obelisks and mounds of dirt and like the mausoleums that you see that
just look like little houses. Basically any structure humans could construct, you can also put dead people in there.
And then it's a tomb.
And then it's a tomb, baby.
But now we have to poke holes.
What if it's frogs instead of people?
What if I build a little house for dead frogs and I put dead frogs in there on little shelves.
As long as it was created consciously and purposefully by a human, I would say that that is a tomb.
Because it's about the creation by the humans.
It's not actually about what's buried in there.
In fact, you can have a tomb that has no body in it.
Just not used yet.
A memorial, like the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier.
Not the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, but like if somebody died at sea.
Sure.
For example, there are graves, there are tombs that are erected to that person, even though the body isn't there.
Does it have to have more than one body in it?
No.
It can just be one person. It can just be one person. It can be zero people. It can be multiple
people. The person can be buried there directly. It could be cremated remains. It could be,
often the body is left, you know, in, for example, Neolithic British tombs. They let the body decay
fully down to bones and then they would collect the bones up in a
little pile and put it in a nook they were thinking they were like people we got thousands
of years to be doing this we're not gonna what else do you have to do it's the neolithic you're
you're you're digging hen monuments you're you're uh doing agriculture for the first time which
means you're not traveling around.
You already built your house.
You got so much free time in the winter, especially.
What are you doing?
I will continue to poke a hole. What if I'm a murderer and I put them in there without their consent and in secret?
I don't think consent is necessary for it to be called a tomb.
I think for it to be a tomb, there has to be a monumental aspect to it.
Just to be marked somehow.
I agree.
Which I don't mean it's like a big monument, but something that is marking the death of a person who is loved or respected.
So I have to be a murderer who loves and respects my victims.
Great.
Right.
Well, an unmarked grave, I wouldn't call a tomb.
Certainly not.
No, I definitely did not know what a tomb was going into this.
I had a vague idea, but now I'm like, oh, okay, there's actually people have thought about this.
Wikipedia doesn't really clear it up too much either,
because it just lists every kind of way somebody could get buried, basically.
It is a very cool list, though.
I learned about new ways that people can get buried from that list, like hanging coffins, which are used by cultures like Indonesia and the Philippines.
People would carve their own stone enclosures for when they would die.
And then these would be hung on cliffside faces
because those are the spaces where they had to memorialize the dead.
And so instead of burying them within the ground,
it's just like, we're going to create this little nook for you.
Like a big wall of dead people?
Yeah.
Wow.
Vertical graveyard.
And sometimes they're stacked pretty close together.
Yeah, vertical graveyard. And not down in the ground, but like... Cool. It's a great view? Yeah. Wow. Vertical graveyard. And sometimes they're stacked pretty close together. Yeah, vertical graveyard.
And not down in the ground, but like.
Cool.
It's a great view.
Yeah.
Seaside, oceanside.
Sari, do you know where the word tomb comes from?
And why does it have a B on it?
Yeah, I know both of those questions, I think.
So the word tomb in English comes from the French word tomb, where they pronounce the B a little bit harder. And I think the B became silent in the Middle English period. So after we stole the word from French, as languages want to do.
from French as languages want to do.
Like other words,
like lamb and dumb,
the, the B held on to the end,
but we just dropped the sound of it.
So there are lots of words that ended up with the B,
but it used to be pronounced.
It used to be vocalized in French and then also in ancient Greek.
And the ancient Greek word for a burial mound was Timbos or Timbos.
I couldn't get a sense of the O of what it was supposed to be.
And it just referred to any sort of grave or tomb, usually a mound of dirt or rock monolith or things like that.
And then before that, the etymology gets a little weird.
We're not sure whether that Greek word came from ancient Greek
and kind of was related to the word typha,
which was a lot of different things,
monsters, storms, diseases, plants,
all kinds of things kind of congealed into this word,
or whether it was a cognate with the Latin word tumulus,
which is still a word that's used to describe like barrows or like mound type graves.
That sounds pretty likely, huh?
Right?
Yeah.
And so some linguists are like,
oh, they sound the same,
so it's probably related to tumulus,
which is also where we get tumor or tuberculosis
or things like that,
just a swelling, a swelling of the ground.
Fairy barrows.
That's what we call them where I'm from.
Oh, that sounds very british that's
ground tumors yeah and that means that it's time for us to move on to the quiz portion of our show
this week i won't be playing a little game called the gauntlet
yeah a gauntlet with the guest is a brave brave move i don't make these decisions
but i agree with you to start we're going to be facing a series of seven questions of decreasing
difficulty i will be directing the questions to you from seven to one asking just one of you at
a time and you can choose either to answer or pass.
If you answer and are correct,
you will be given the points,
the same number of points as the question number.
So the harder questions get you more points.
If you're wrong,
you will lose that number of points and your opponent can steal for that same number of points.
But if they're wrong,
they don't lose any points.
Also new rule.
If your opponent attempts to steal the question and gets it wrong,
then the next person after them attempts to steal the question
and also gets it wrong,
that question will then be off the table for
future rounds of the game. So we've got
to stop. We're not going to try and get the answer
if nobody knows the answer. If you pass,
your opponent will get asked the next question, which
will be a little less difficult.
After we've gone through all the questions, we will revisit
the past questions. Only this time
they cannot be skipped. If you
get the answer wrong, your opponents can
steal from you. And remember,
pay attention to all the questions because sometimes
you might get clues to help you
with those harder questions. For today's
episode of The Gauntlet, we're going to be talking
undiscovered tombs of historical
figures and the work that goes into making them discovered.
Starting with question seven.
In 1485, King Richard III of England was killed in battle and. Brought back to Lester to be buried at a church.
Local legend said that his bones were later dug up by a mob and thrown into a river during the Reformation.
Recent historians have disputed that lore and came up with a more likely location that turned out to be correct.
Where did they think?
It was a car park, Hank.
They found him in a car park.
Great.
British question for a British person.
Seven points for me!
Next question!
Our hardest game, most complicated rules, and Siobhan is a genius.
So, yeah.
In 2012, the Leicester City Council, University the leicester city council university of leicester and richard the third
society began an archaeological dig out of the parking lot of the social services department
in the very first trench they dug and within six hours of their two-week excavation
they managed to find a skeleton whose body bore signs of battle wounds and the curved spine
and eventually uh they did some some DNA sampling and carbon dating
and confirmed that the bones belonged to King Richard III.
A car park.
My kingdom for a car park.
Why did Mob pull them out and throw them somewhere else?
Here's the thing.
The Tudors who came after Richard III,
just incredible propagandists.
Really, really good at propaganda propaganda so a lot of the stories
you hear about richard the third you have to sort of look at through the lens of what the tutors
were saying about him afterwards because he had a much more real uh claim to the throne than the
tutors had the tutors were like somebody's great aunt was married to the
bastard son of somebody's cousin all right sam question number six the great pyramid of giza
was built on the order of pharaoh kufu uh though his actual burial location remains unknown
scientists recently had to refute claims that they'd found his burial location after they identified a horizontal chamber above the entrance to the pyramid.
One of the techniques they used to discover this chamber relies on being able to detect a specific particle.
This is like a physics particle.
Damn it.
What particle?
This is so much hotter than my question.
We made a SciShow episode about this.
Well, I mean, maybe if you're British.
Waves, some kind of waves of some sort well more of a particle than a wave oh shit well then i don't
know uh you're not gonna you can you can you can pass you're right you can pass i'm choosing to
pass all right so sam has passed so sari here's
your question number five according to legend genghis khan did not want people to know where
he was buried and asked that the site be kept a secret and reporters who have talked to people
in mongolia have found that that sentiment holds among many today but that has not stopped others
from trying to find genghis khan's tomb in, researchers used the search for the tomb as an opportunity
to test out crowdsourcing, asking more than 10,000 online volunteers to sift through more
than 80,000 images covering small chunks of the Mongolian landscape. The volunteers were asked to
label images with up to five tags, including modern structure, ancient structure, roads,
and other. What was the fifth tag? So there was modern structure, ancient structure roads and other what was the fifth tag so there was modern structure ancient
structure roads uh a a fourth one and then just other what was the fourth thing as a thing people
maybe were seeing hill hill is a great guess but it is wrong okay javon you have a chance to steal if you would like to and there's no cost to this
okay I will say
some kind of water source
river lake
river is the image
that was my guess too
if it was a record show I would have said river
so the researchers used the tomb of Genghis Khan as an example of a needle in a haystack problem
except where you don't know what the needle actually looks like no burials of Mongolian
imperial family members have been found so there's little way for people to be able to
figure out what the tomb would even look like. Instead, the researchers were focused on seeing
how the volunteers responded to the task
and how they shaped their choice of tags
when they saw the choices that other volunteers made.
The end result was a crowdsourced map
of 100 highly ranked locations,
55 of which turned out to be what they called
archaeologically and culturally significant sites
that included some burial sites.
The actual location
of gingus comes to him remains unknown though there are a few locations that do seem somewhat
likely figuring out which one would be the actual one who the heck knows siobhan you get to go again
and i don't know why we're still doing this because you've all basically already won while
nicholas copernicus died in 1543 uh it buried beneath the cathedral, his grave was unmarked and the location of his remains remained ambiguous for centuries.
But in 2005, Polish archaeologists found some skeleton fragments that belonged to a man who could have been Copernicus, lacking DNA from any relatives to compare to, researchers weren't sure what they could use to identify the remains until Swedish researchers brought up that they had an item belonging to Copernicus that might contain some of his hair.
What was it?
The Swedes had this item?
The Swedes had an item that might contain hair of Copernicus. Hair
of Copernicus. And it's not a comb
or a brush. And these are Swedish
scientists that have this or like a Swedish
museum? Swedish. Can I ask that?
Is that or it's just
a bunch of random Swedes? It says
they were researchers so my guess
is that probably they were connected to a museum.
I
will guess my knowledge of Copernicus not being very high, that it was a telescope of some kind that they used hair in some kind of construction for.
Could have been, but it wasn't.
That wasn't it.
Was that close?
Was it close?
I mean, in that it's about...
So no, I think the answer is no.
Not even a little bit close.
Because that makes me think it could have been something like a crosshair,
something with a crosshair in it that he had used.
Oh, that's very smart.
Like a level or like a sextant.
Is it a sextant?
That's a telescope probably, kind of, huh?
Okay.
Sextant is not a telescope.
Sextant is for star measurement.
It's telescope adjacent.
Yeah.
You look through something.
It's definitely a scientific instrument.
Yeah.
With a telescope.
Clothing would be too obvious, I think.
And also, like a notebook.
Like, he wrote a lot of books.
I'm just going to give it to you.
It was a book.
Wow.
It was like a book of measurements of stuff, an astronomical reference book that I think that he created.
So that definitely passes.
It was called the Calendarium Romanium Magnum.
Oh, no, it wasn't his book.
It was by Johann Stoffler, and it had been used by Copernicus for quite some time.
And when Sweden invaded Poland, the book was moved to Sweden and later became the property of the university there.
And the researchers ended up finding nine hairs in the book, four of which ended up matching the skeleton, suggesting that it was indeed the remains of Copernicus.
What the heck?
Wild.
And just some other people's hair in there, too.
You can find other skeletons.
That was just all of his best buddies yeah
they're reading the book together as you do just hunched right over it really looking at the
calendar with your friends we all love looking at the roman calendar with our friends they didn't
have tv yet okay you couldn't watch orange is the new black you had to watch that. Sam, in 2008, archaeologists were digging up a tomb in Magdeburg Cathedral, and they were surprised to find that it was not empty.
Inside was a lead box with an inscription translating to,
The remains of Queen Edegarth are in this sarcophagus.
Of course, one does not simply
trust inscriptions, and the archaeologists
wanted to confirm that these were in fact
the remains of the queen who died around
946 CE.
One method they used relied
on the ratio of strontium
isotopes found in a particular part
of the skeleton's remain. What
part was it i know this
oh my god i hate you i think i know it i think i don't know like a fake tooth is it a fake tooth
it's a real tooth and that's great i'll give it to you okay great thank you a tooth period
but that's a good instinct because like the skeleton
is universally made of like the same thing over and over again just bone except for the teeth
yeah and she didn't have like a new hip put in or anything probably no so because the ratio of
strontium isotopes can tell scientists about the types of food and water we eat as we grow up
and rocks form with small traces of rubidium 87 which decays into
strontium 87 and you can use the ratio of strontium 87 to the more stable strontium 86
to date the rocks as older rocks will have a lower ratio but importantly as rocks weather
that strontium gets into the soil which then gets into the meat and the grains we eat which then
turn gets into our teeth so as we grow up the meat and the grains we eat, which then gets into our teeth.
So as we grow up, the strontium ratio of our teeth will reflect the strontium ratio in the areas we were growing up in.
That's so smart.
Scientists are so smart.
I would like to say, Siobhan, when we were emailing, you were like, oh, I was an archaeologist once for a year a long time ago.
You're a freaking genius.
That's not fair.
I just have a really good memory for really useless facts.
I'm just very smart, is Siobhan.
I'm just really smart.
I'm really clever, and I keep reading things about the things that I don't do anymore.
That's not fair.
I don't do them anymore.
All right.
We've got Sari now for question number two.
Richard III did not leave behind any living descendants.
So when archaeologists found the skeleton and his possible burial place, they relied on DNA to identify the body.
Problem is, Richard III did not have any descendants.
The researchers didn't have any old books or similar items to get hair samples from.
didn't have any old books or similar items to get hair samples from,
but they were able to identify an all-female line of descent through Richard III's sister.
This meant they were able to gather a particular type of DNA passed down through our mothers that they could then match to Richard III's DNA.
What type of DNA was that?
Biology question.
Thank goodness.
Mitochondrial DNA.
That's correct. Mito correct mitochondria have their own
dna and it's only passed down through the egg cell and so it's only through the matrilineal line
so i have my mother's dna uh and she has her mother's dna and so on but my son doesn't have
any of my mitochondrial dna he has catherine's has Catherine's mother's mitochondrial DNA, et cetera. So they can use that to track the descent in a different way
and still be able to know that it was that guy, even though he doesn't have any living descent.
That's the second, our easiest question.
Oh, I mean, I knew the, I knew that one.
Okay. I knew that one.
Okay. Well, last question, please.
Last question is for Siobhan.
All right.
In 2022,
Swedish archaeologist and Polish research,
Polish researcher.
I'm not making it easy for me here.
A lot of Polish questions.
Polish researcher.
Both made claims that they had identified the burial site of King.
Oh,
it's just Harold. that they had identified the burial site of King Harald.
Oh, it's just Harald.
I don't know why I had to say that.
Yeah.
God damn it.
If you laugh that hard, we're going to keep it in.
And that's terrifying for me.
Harald.
Harald.
King Harald I of Denmark, who was killed in a battle around 987 CE and who was, according to them, buried in what is today a church in Poland.
While they relied on artifacts and geological satellite images, currently there is not much evidence in the form of muons or other particles to suggest that this is where King Harold was buried. However, the king has had a very clear legacy on our lives thanks to a modern day
technology whose name is inspired by the dead tooth that King Harold was known for.
What is that technology? It's Bluetooth, Hank.
It's Bluetooth, Siobhan. It's Bluetooth.
Guess he had a Bluetooth harold bluetooth yes the little rune that is the bluetooth indicator the bluetooth symbol
it was a rune of his name yeah vikings he was known for having united denmark under one ruler
conquering norway and converting the Danes and Norwegians to Christianity.
While he was thought to have died in battle, the writings say that he was likely buried in a church in Denmark.
The exact location isn't known, which has opened up other theories.
One being, it's in your ear.
He died in battle because he was listening to his damn wireless headphones.
He wasn't paying attention.
He was listening to a podcast wireless headphones. He wasn't paying attention. He's like, listening to a podcast?
Yeah.
Very distracting.
He was laughing at how you said his name
and then he got, foop, arrow right through the head.
I've learned that it is dangerous to listen to a podcast
when you are in a room with a loved one.
If you are right now listening to this podcast.
Giggling to yourself while your loved one. If you are right now listening to this podcast and you're giggling to yourself
while your loved one
and your loved one
is asking you a question
about your child's breakfast,
you should feel shamed
just like I did this morning.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Take him out.
Okay, I'm going to try
to answer my question now
about the particle.
The particle's the only one.
Yeah, the particle question
is the only one we didn't get.
This has actually gone
way better than a lot of gauntlets.
Because Siobhan is a genius.
Clearly, that's the key.
We need one smart person.
I just remember things.
Is it a muon?
I don't know anything about particles, though.
The physics stuff, I was not very good at.
Whose go is it to answer the particle?
Me, my go.
Is it a muon?
It is. And there was a hint, and you did pick up on it a muon? It is.
And there was a hint and you did pick up on it.
Yes.
What is a muon?
I have no idea what a muon is.
It's a particle.
Okay.
Alright.
I don't really know.
I barely know what a particle is.
It's like not an atom.
It's like bits of an atom.
Smaller than an atom, yeah.
Isn't it like an electron?
It's like a big electron, yeah.
Well, we've tallied up the scores,
and somehow Sam and Siobhan,
in an unjust turn of events, are tied.
Wait, what?
I'm smart, too, it turns out.
I think that Sam didn't get any
wrong, and Siobhan, you got one
wrong, and that took
away from your score. Dang.
Sari has nine,
and I maybe have nine
if I get all of the negative points.
I only have one. Collected to me.
I have no chance of winning. Oh, Sari has
one, and maybe I have nine, and
maybe I have zero.
We'll figure that out later.
You definitely have zero.
Okay, I definitely have.
But I didn't get a chance to get any points.
That's okay.
Who cares?
Fake game.
It's not real.
You're not allowed to be the king of Halloween.
I paid $500 into the bucket for this game, and if I don't win some of it back, I'm going to feel like I'm being stolen from.
Somebody told me to Venmo them.
I didn't really get the lowdown on how 21
involves betting at all. Anything can involve
betting. If you love to bet, Hank,
you can bet anything you want.
Okay.
Alright, next up, we're going to take
a short break, then Sam
has another devious game for us all.
Welcome back, everybody. Sam, what are you going to do to us?
Okay, so you guys ready?
Tombs are many things.
They're invaluable sources of archaeological information, acting as a time capsule to another time and culture.
They're also weird and creepy.
All of these aspects of tombs make them a terrific breeding ground for hoaxes.
Want to try and trick your way into the scientific community?
Want to make some money?
Want to just make people feel weird? There's a tomb hoax for you. And now I will tell you about
some of them, but I've concocted a little hoax of my own. Some of these hoaxes are real hoaxes,
and some of these are hoax hoaxes made up by me. It's your job to tell me which is which in a game
that I call hoax or hoax hoax. In other words, we're playing truth or fail express with hoaxes.
So it's just true or false.
Question one.
And you'll all answer these independently.
In the 1920s, the state of Mississippi purchased a large collection of artifacts from the estate of a prominent recently deceased citizen.
Including in this collection was an Egyptian mummy, which was put on display in the Mississippi Capitol building for decades
until, in 1969, an X-ray of the mummy revealed that it was made of papier-mâché and animal bones
on top of a wooden frame. Is this a real hoax or a hoax-hoax?
I think it's a real hoax because Americans will do the wildest shit with the things in their backyard.
I mean, I think it's a real hoax uh and if it's fake it's
got to be close to a real hoax because i've been to a hoax like this it's called the thing and it's
a roadside attraction you have to walk through like a whole maze of weird stuff before you arrive
at what is definitely a paper mache mummy i think it's real because in the 1920s there was a huge thriving fake mummy business yeah people loved to
buy mummies in and honestly like from the 1700s up until i mean people still love to buy fake
archaeological things but like there was a big pop in the 1920s because of tootin common this is
probably the best performance of anyone on any
episode of tangents by siobhan it's a real hoax it wasn't even x-rayed because anyone was suspicious
of its authenticity though a medical student named gentry yeetman wanted to autopsy it for
signs of ancient disease and then he did and then he said wait a minute. The ancient diseases said this is a dog.
This isn't even a guy.
All right.
Next up.
In 1987, a team of archaeologists were investigating a Mayan tomb in Belize when they discovered an extremely out of place pop culture reference.
A small engraving placed on one of the sarcophagi featuring the images of Star Wars droids R2-D2 and C-3PO.
The researchers made no assumption that it was
authentic obviously and eventually a local sculptor admitted to sneaking the anachronistic
artifact into the tomb several years before just for fun real hoax or hoax hoax i love it i want
to say it's real yeah this is really tough because people are scams and i respect it
we used to do this when I was an archaeologist.
When we would fill in the trenches, we would just throw in a handful of coins or something,
or something from the world to confuse the next lot of archaeologists to come along.
I think you should do that.
To be like, hey, have fun.
This is just a joke for the future.
They must have done it for ritual purposes.
Yes, exactly.
But is there a big tomb thing in the Mayan?
Don't ask us.
I'm not a big Mayan guy.
I think it might be fake.
I'm going to go fake on this one.
I'm also going to go hoax, hoax.
I think it's fake fake thanks for using the correct
the correct term sir you're welcome i'm a professional the answer is this hoax is a
hoax hoax i made it all up but it was inspired by the hieroglyphics of r2d2 and c3po that you
can see in the great movie ride at disney mgm studios next up in the late 1890s the louvre bought a gold crown
allegedly belonging to an ancient middle eastern king for a whole lot of money upon displaying the
piece several experts told the louvre that the crown was clearly fake but the louvre said nah
until 1903 when a ukrainian artist who made the crown went to the louvre to tell them he had made
it at the behest of a dealer who told him it was intended as a gift for a friend,
but the Louvre still didn't believe him.
So he made another crown and said, look, I made another crown.
And they said, fine, we believe you real hoax or hoax hoax.
I'm going to go real because museums still do this stuff.
There's something rotten in the state of denmark uh when it comes to museums
you can't believe everything that they write on the little uh captions the new the the
metropolitan museum got in trouble this year for buying stolen artifacts and artifacts that were
um not as real as they were claiming to be they They were like Egyptian stuff that they'd like stuck one thing on top of the
other.
Maybe that's the story I based this on.
Hmm.
Yeah,
maybe,
but I'm going to go with true as well.
Uh,
just because that seems,
I mean,
I think Sam's just too good at selling this stuff.
I agree.
Multi-layered good twists and turns the artist coming back at the end character development you
know all right so this hoax was a real hoax the louvre was super embarrassed about this whole
thing but the guy who made the crown got famous for being so good at making stuff like crowns
and he lived in paris for the rest of his life and even received a gold medal from the paris salon
of decorative arts the louvre would later display massive amounts of cope when the crown was the rest of his life and even received a gold medal from the Paris Salon of Decorative Arts.
The Louvre would later display massive amounts of cope when the crown was included in their Salon of Fakes exhibition in the 50s. You might notice that I didn't mention tombs at all in this
fact. I'll just assume that somebody told somebody this was from a tomb. I'm not really sure,
but it was too good of a story not to do. I'm not worried about it, Sam. I hadn't thought of that.
That had not occurred to me. performing brain surgery, or people riding on and hunting dinosaurs. The Eco Stones are, of course, hoaxes, but the question is,
are they a real hoax or a hoax hoax by me, the hoax master?
Did you just make it up or is it a real thing?
Yeah.
I think I might just go with real hoax for all of them.
I think I just like I'm settling, but I think they're all real.
I think this one's real too.
I think I'm going to go real on this one too.
Rats. It's a real one when an episode of the bbc documentary series horizon covered the eco stones in 1977 the farmer who claimed to have found and sold them brought were brought
was brought to the attention of the peruvian authorities because if the dude really found
and sold these stones then he was committing a crime but then the farmer told him that he and
his wife had
just made the stones to sell to tourists there's a nice couple's crafting activity
and they were like actually that's fine you're totally allowed you can't grave rob but but
lying to tourists is great that's a okay good for the economy they're great looking stones too
and finally a short but sweet one in 2017 a team of
archaeologists opened a sarcophagus in the ancient egyptian city of memphis to find that a merry
prankster had wrapped a teddy bear in gauze and placed it next to the mummy inside the archaeologist
dated the teddy bear to 1994 by reading the tag attached to it no culprit was ever identified
real hoax or hoax hoax hoax hoax there's a lot of tombs in memphis however they are underground
so if you were going to break into this tomb open the sarcophagus put a teddy bear in and then leave
seems like a lot of work seems like a lot of work so for that reason i'm going to go hoax hoax
just giving too many good reasons because now we're all going to say hoax hoax i'm going to say real hoax just to switch it up who knows this people are scamps now i learned
that people are scamps so you know the scamp logic you say you come out looking like a total
blockhead because this was a hoax hoax i just made it up entirely i like the the object was dated by looking at the tag. That's very good.
Yes, the Beanie Baby birthday was there.
It was 1994.
Beanie Babies were worth billions of dollars.
That teddy bear enriched that tomb by a significant amount.
All right.
Well, that means that in amongst all of the fighting that just occurred,
our final candy count, Sam has nine,
Sari has five,
I have four,
or maybe,
or maybe 13,
and Siobhan,
doesn't matter what I have,
has 14.
Wow.
Congratulations.
Boo, boo, boo, boo.
You deeply earned it. Wow, maybe I should go back and get my masters.
Maybe it's time.
I think this is a sign, yeah.
I think just play them this podcast episode
yeah and i'll be like here you go yeah what else could you possibly have to learn you know exactly
exactly here's the thing with archaeology it's just a bunch of dweebs who just like learning
little fun facts and that's that's the that's the nature of the the industry that's that's the kind
of dweeb i am uh but i'll learn the fun facts after they work hard to find them,
and then they'll just tell them.
You'll just read it on the internet later.
I just did that from bed.
Great.
And now it's time to ask the science couch,
where we've got a question for our couch of finely honed scientific minds.
Just for playlists on YouTube asks,
how do large burial mounds affect the local ecosystem?
I grew up in Florida where there's huge mounds of mostly shellfish shells.
And I never really thought about how it is basically a giant garbage.
Alkalizing the soil.
Yeah, definitely doesn't do nothing.
But that's all.
That's my only thought that I have.
Head empty.
Otherwise, help.
Help someone.
I think it depends on how many bodies are buried in the mound.
I would imagine like if you're talking about one body, probably not very much.
If you're talking about hundreds, probably quite a lot.
Is that useful?
Yeah.
Sarah's actually done research.
I have done research. Which is the research which is about this part of the podcast
and so yeah i think to some extent it depends on how many bodies but i think that there's a lot we
don't know about this pop culture phenomenon of uh vegetation on top of the earth indicating
where dead bodies or where decomposition is happening underneath the
earth so there is some observable effect that bodies buried in very shallow graves and that
are allowed to decompose can increase vegetation but we don't really know why and we don't know if
it's consistent and so the the main ways that burial mounds actually affect
the local ecosystems aren't because of the decomposing bodies, but because they are
cultural sites. Of course, there are some situations where people are like, I want to
do agriculture here and just kind of bulldoze an area, often destroying burial mounds in the process. But if those mounds are left alone,
they actually have higher native plant biodiversity
because oftentimes when humans get our hands on green spaces,
we manicure it or plant what we want to.
But in a lot of regions,
particularly in Europe and Central Asia, where there are these vast grasslands that are oftentimes disturbed by human settlements or developments,
these burial mounds are really hotspot ecosystems for native grasses, a lot of biodiversity, particularly of insects and pollinators and kind of boring plants,
but that are really important for the environment because they're left
untouched.
But there's this idea that if for cultural reasons,
we leave something alone,
then the nature is doing okay.
It's the story of Chernobyl where it's like,
oh,
well,
we can't go there.
And then nature's like,
great.
That's actually,
you're the biggest problem.
You are a bigger problem
than the giant nuclear power plant
that exploded.
I'll invent a new type of mushroom
and this will be okay.
Yeah.
We'll just have some dogs evolve
to be better at being dogs.
If you want to ask the Science Couch
your questions,
you can follow us on Twitter
at SciShow Tangents
where we'll tweet out topics
for upcoming episodes every week.
Or you can join the SciShow Tangents Patreon and ask us on our
Discord. Thank you to Charlie Crossing on Discord and at Solok Holmes on YouTube and also everybody
else who asked us questions for this episode. Siobhan, thank you so much for joining us.
Thank you.
Where can we see what you're up to these days?
Well, social media is falling into a black pit of death.
So don't even think about looking for me there.
So I don't know, watch Dimension 20 on Dropout or on YouTube.
Hank is there as well for a little bit.
And we've got a bunch more coming out this year as well as that.
We're going on tour to the UK in April, but I think it's already sold out.
And I don't know if you see me in the street.
Be nice to me, please.
I'm very sensitive.
You just start this podcast over again and there you'll be.
If you like this show and you want to help us out, it's super easy to do that.
First, you can go to patreon.com slash SciShow Tangents to become a patron and get access to things like our newsletter and our bonus episodes.
And don't forget, we have hit 700 patrons on our Patreon, which means that we're going to be doing a commentary on the Minions movie.
So get ready to hear a whole lot about piss.
If that sounds good to you, be sure to join our Patreon at any level to get access to that commentary as soon as it is released.
Second, leave us a review wherever you listen.
It's super helpful enough to know what you think about the show.
And finally, if you want to show your love for SciShow Tangents, just tell people about us.
I've been Hank Green.
I've been Sari Reilly.
And I've been Sam Schultz.
I've been me the whole time.
What a reveal.
SciShow Tangents is created by all of us and produced by Sam Schultz
our associate producer is Eve Schmidt
our editor is Seth Glicksman, our story editor
is Alex Billow, our social media organizer
is Julia Buzz-Bazio, our editorial
assistant is Debuki Chakravarti
our sound design is by Joseph
Bouda-Metish
were we doing creepy ones before?
or was that the first one
just for him
just for tuna
okay
our executive producers
are Nicole Sweeney
and me Hank Green
and of course
we couldn't make any of this
without our patrons
on Patreon
thank you
and remember
the mind is not
a coffin to be filled
but a jack-o-lantern
to be lighted.
But, one more thing.
In February 2004,
the marble tomb of the Italian warlord Cangre de la Scala was opened so that we could do science on his body.
Written documents from July 1329 said that his sudden death was from drinking from a polluted spring, which led to a fever, diarrhea and vomiting, TMI. researchers wanted to investigate this claim, Kangray's body was naturally mummified and
luckily there was a bunch of old poo in his colon and rectum that they could sample along with his
bones and liver and other less related body parts. In a paper published in February 2015 in the
Journal of Archaeological Science, the team reported evidence of foxglove pollen grains in his rectum and two foxglove derived toxins in his liver and
poo that were at lethal concentrations 700 years ago so they concluded that can grade may have been
intentionally poisoned rather than randomly sick leaving us with a murder mystery that will
probably never be sold it is wild that we grow foxgloves so much because they are so deeply deeply poisonous
they are so poisonous it is so you can breathe in foxglove and die what does foxglove look like
it they're beautiful flowers you would recognize them because they're in every single garden i do
think my wife is growing these so watch watch out if I disappear. Be careful.
I mean, I just simply would not eat anything that she gives me.