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Evolution Revolution?

By Sean Henahan, Access Excellence

Washington, DC (6/25/99)- Since the publication of the "Origin of the Species" by Charles Darwin in 1859, the science of evolution has itself evolved beyond a general theory to an enhanced understanding of the synergistic processes of life on Earth and to a tool used in modern molecular medicine. Yet, there appears to be a widening chasm between public understanding of evolution and its application in the science world.

"What strange set of historical circumstances, what odd disconnect between science and society, can explain the paradox that organic evolution--the central operating concept of an entire discipline and one of the firmest facts ever validated by science--remains such a focus of controversy, even of widespread disbelief, in contemporary America?" asks Stephen Jay Gould Ph.D., in an essay in an issue of the journal Science dedicated to the science of evolution. Gould is a professor of zoology at Harvard university and author of numerous books on evolution including the Flamingo's Smile and the Panda's Thumb.

Gould calls for renewed efforts in education to "end the embarrassing paradox of a technological nation entering a new millennium with nearly half its people actively denying the greatest biological discovery ever made." He proposes three principles to guide educational outreach efforts. The first principle he proposes is "Evolution is true--and the truth can only make us free." The second is "Evolution liberates the human spirit." He notes that science can forge partnerships with philosophy, religion and the arts, but only after it is freed from the demand to provide answers to questions it cannot address. The final principle is "For sheer excitement, evolution, as an empirical reality, beats any myth of human origins by light-years." Teachers and scientists may forget how much of a challenge Darwin's ideas pose to many personal belief systems. Focusing on a 4 billion year old genealogical history and encouraging study of the diversity of life can impart a sense of "thrill" and "grandeur" to the study of biology, he emphasizes.

The ongoing study of evolution has become increasingly an interdisciplinary pursuit. Collaboration among researchers in the fields of organic chemistry, genetics, developmental biology, ecology, paleontology, and the earth sciences are creating a new synthesis of understanding of the process of evolution on the microscopic and macroscopic scales. Most recently, rapid progress in the field of genomic science is confirming the basic tenets of evolution, while revealing a few surprises along the way,

"The breadth of evolution's contribution to research and our daily lives remains grossly unappreciated--and sometimes deliberately denied--in the public realm. Evolutionary methods and concepts have been brought to bear on key questions in contemporary medicine, such as AIDS research and the biology of malaria, and are an important element in the current controversies surrounding genetically modified foods," notes Brooks Hanson, deputy editor of Science, in a related essay.

Back to the Future

Dinosaurs have probably done more to popularize evolution than Darwin. Dinosaur fossils continue to be essential to the study of evolution, according to University of Chicago paleontologist Paul Sereno, who reviews the science of dinosaur evolution in the same issue of Science (June 25, 1999). Questions on the grand scale can often not be answered with data gleaned from the anatomy and genes of animals living today, he notes, adding:

"Certain questions about evolution can only be investigated at the grandest scales using the fossil record."

Calling the the Mesozoic era (248 to 65 million years ago) "one of the grandest experiments in the history of life," Sereno notes that during that period all the land animals more than one meter long were dinosaurs. A review of the record appears to support the idea that evolution has a more opportunistic aspect to it it in addition to the slow, gradual quality that defines the overall process. He cites research indicating that the dinosaurs didn't dominate until 15 million years after first appearing on Earth, coinciding with a mass extinction that killed off many other reptiles.

The time scale of the fossil record also allows for a better understanding of the evolution of birds. Fossil studies track the appearance of winged dinosaurs, and then a gradual reduction in body size and the appearance of feathers until the appearance of modern day birds.

The special evolution issue of Science also includes articles on the complete spectrum of research in the field. At one end of the timeline, researchers are gaining new insight into how RNA evolved and became the key molecule of life. Closer to the human family, new research shows for the first time that independent groups of chimpanzees demonstrate grooming and tool use practices that could represent primitive form of culture. Molecular phylogeneticists are also shaking the tree of life somewhat, by proposing a new hierarchy of living things that is based on comparative analyses of the nucleotide sequences of genes encoding ribosomal RNAs,to the chagrin of traditional taxonomists. Finally, completing the circle, resurgent interest (and funding) for the field of exobiology, life beyond our own planet, is producing remarkable information on the earliest traces of life on Earth found in rocks that are billions of years old.

The June 25,.1999 issue of Science is dedicated to research in the field of evolution.

Related information on the Internet
Evolution: Theory and History
Evolution and the Nature of Science

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