The Tangled Tree

Paperback, 461 pages

English language

Published July 15, 2018

ISBN:
978-1-4767-7662-0
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(5 reviews)

Science writer David Quammen explains how recent discoveries in molecular biology can change our understanding of evolution and life’s history, with powerful implications for human health and even our own human nature.

In the mid-1970s, scientists began using DNA sequences to reexamine the history of all life. Perhaps the most startling discovery to come out of this new field—the study of life’s diversity and relatedness at the molecular level—is horizontal gene transfer (HGT), or the movement of genes across species lines. It turns out that HGT has been widespread and important. For instance, we now know that roughly eight percent of the human genome arrived not through traditional inheritance from directly ancestral forms, but sideways by viral infection—a type of HGT.

David Quammen chronicles these discoveries through the lives of the researchers who made them—such as Carl Woese, the most important little-known biologist of the twentieth century; Lynn Margulis, the …

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More Human than Human

This book has split my brain open.

I have examined, handled, peered at countless human placentas. Moreso than any other internal organ. It's kind of weird. That baby made this alien thing?

There's a layer, as thin as can be, protecting this foreign embryo, halfway consisting of someone else, from the mother's immune system. That layer is made with a protein encoded by a gene from a virus.

Our ancestors stopped laying eggs because of DNA they picked up from a virus! HOLY FUCK! Why did I not know this? Why doesn't everybody know this?

Like any great science book, the knowledge it put in my brain is outweighed by the new questions I have.

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