A Story
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Google books | books.google.com |
---|---|
Originally published | 2013 |
Authors | Gipi |
Genres | Comics |
Graphic Novel | |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 2979827 |
About A Story
Silvano Landi is a successful writer who, at the age of 50, sees his family leave him and his life fall apart. Landi's great-grandfather, Mauro, is an anxious soldier being fed to the maw of carnage in the First World War. . . .
Reindeer missing after escaping Elveden Christmas grotto
......
Kiss to become 'immortal' thanks to Abba's avatar technology
... " Is it a Kiss concert in the future? Is it a rock opera? Is it a musical? A Story, an adventure? " Known for their eye-catching make-up and larger-than-life performances, Kiss became one of the biggest arena rock acts of the 1970s and 80s...
Copy of first World Cup sticker album to be auctioned
......
Record number of girls on Borders College farming course
... " Do you have an idea for A Story we could cover? Email our local reporters in the Scottish Borders at Related Topics...
24 Hours in Police Custody: Bedford takeaway siege recounted
......
Muriel McKay's daughter urges Met to let mother's killer find body
......
Thurrock residents tell of life under a 'bankrupt' council
......
Danny Macklin: Essex Police appeals to find ex-Wimbledon chief
......
Cambridge University museum finds 150-year-old platypus specimens
Specimens of mammals that helped support the theory of evolution 150 years ago have been found at a museum.
The platypus and echidna (spiny anteaters) samples discovered at Cambridge University's Museum of Zoology had been collected in the late 1800s by scientist William Caldwell.
At that time, they were key to proving some mammals laid eggs, and supported the theory of evolution.
Jack Ashby, from The Museum , said The Discovery was " pretty amazing".
The Collection had not been catalogued by The Museum , so until recently staff did not know it existed.
Mr Ashby, The Museum 's assistant director, said: " I knew from experience that there isn't a Natural History collection on Earth that actually has a comprehensive catalogue of everything in it, and I suspected that Caldwell's specimens really ought to be here. "
He asked the collections manager to keep an eye out, and The Samples were found in a box.
Until Europeans first encountered platypuses and echidnas in the 1790s, it had been assumed that all mammals gave birth To Live young.
The question of whether some mammals lay eggs then became hotly debated in scientific circles.
" In the 19Th Century , many conservative scientists didn't want To Believe that an egg-laying mammal could exist, because this would support the theory of evolution, the idea that one animal group was capable of changing Into Another , " Mr Ashby said.
" Lizards and frogs lay eggs, so the idea of a mammal laying eggs was dismissed by many People - I think they felt it was degrading to be related to animals that they considered 'lower life forms'. "
William Caldwell had been sent to Australia in 1883, with financial backing from the University of Cambridge, the Royal Society and the government, to try and resolve the long-standing debate.
The Collection includes echidnas, platypuses and marsupials at varying life Stages - from fertilised egg to adolescence.
Mr Ashby said: " It's one thing to read the 19Th Century announcements that platypuses and echidnas actually lay eggs, but to have the physical specimens here, tying us back to that discovery almost 150 years ago, is pretty amazing. "
Source of news: bbc.com