Lauren Sallan: How to win at evolution and survive a mass extinction
劳伦 · 萨兰: 如何在进化过程中胜出,并在生物大灭绝中幸存
TED Fellow Lauren Sallan is a paleobiologist using big data analytics to reveal how macroevolution, or evolution happens at the largest scales, happens. Full bio
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greatest winners --
four billion years in the making.
who have ever lived,
of golden opportunities
of your co-winners and relatives.
who uses big data --
我通过大数据 ——
and others lose.
死去的物种身上找答案。
of beautiful fish fossils,
number of ugly, broken fossils,
有意义和无意义两个类别后,
for evolutionary patterns.
数据库里,打捞出进化模式。
major pathways of change
of the winners and losers
I discovered using fossil data.
再往前推大约六倍的时间,
as the last dinosaur --
with razor-edge jaws dominated
捕食动物是主宰者,
鱼翅中长着臂骨的巨型鱼。
with arm bones in their fins.
across the sea floor.
of salmon and tuna
那些鳍刺鱼类,
lived offshore in fear.
栖居在近海区域。
the tetrapods,
359 million years ago:
and swept away.
that's the end of the story.
the meek inherited the earth,
came from many groups --
to bottom-feeder,
over the next several million years
在接下来几亿年光阴的所作所为,
should have had an advantage.
并等待它们的时机。
and biding their time.
sharks and four-legged tetrapods
鲨鱼,和四腿生物的命运
dying young,
and reproducing rapidly.
and weird bodies.
for their 60,000 living species,
不同的进化途径。
evolutionary pathways.
repeat across time.
在时间的长河里重复上演的。
upon thousands of dead fishes,
through mass extinction,
will not just replace what was lost,
不但会取代已经没落的物种,
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Lauren Sallan - PaleobiologistTED Fellow Lauren Sallan is a paleobiologist using big data analytics to reveal how macroevolution, or evolution happens at the largest scales, happens.
Why you should listen
Lauren Sallan uses the vast fossil record of fishes as a deep time database, mining to find out why some species persist and diversify while others die off. She has used these methods to discover the lost, largest, "sixth" mass extinction of vertebrates; the end-Devonian Hangenberg event (359 million years ago), reveal how fish heads changed first during their rise to dominance; test why some species thrive after global disruptions while others flounder; and show how invasions by new predators can shift prey diversity at global scales.
Sallan is the Martin Meyerson Assistant Professor in Interdisciplinary Studies at the University of Pennsylvania, based in the Department Earth and Environmental Science, and became a TED Fellow in 2017. Her research has been published in Science, PNAS and Current Biology. It has also been featured in the New York Times, The Chicago Tribune, Forbes, the New Scientist, the Discovery Channel and the recent popular science book, The Ends of the World by Peter Brannen.
Lauren Sallan | Speaker | TED.com