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Four billion years of evolution in six minutes - Prosanta Chakrabarty

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Did humans evolve from monkeys or from fish? In this TED Talk, ichthyologist and TED Fellow Prosanta Chakrabarty dispels some hardwired myths about evolution, encouraging us to remember that we're a small part of a complex, four-billion-year process -- and not the end of the line.

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Did we really evolve from fish? It may seem strange that we did, but the evidence can be found not just in fossils but also within our own bodies. From the groove above your top lip, to the reason we hiccup to the location of our gonads- all have roots in our fishy ancestry.

So how did fish evolve into walking land animals? A new genetic study from scientists at New York University reveals something surprising: Fish called “little skates” possess the genetic blueprint that allows for the right-left alternation pattern of locomotion that four-legged land animals use. Those genes were passed down from a common ancestor that lived 420 million years ago, long before the first vertebrates ever crawled from sea to shore. In other words, some animals may have had the neural pathways necessary for walking even before they lived on land.

What other misconceptions do we have about evolution? A popular misconception is that natural selection and evolution are the same thing- but natural selection is just one mechanism of the evolution process. Others include: organisms are always getting bigger and that evolution is about the origin of life.

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