Episode 176: The Air and the Sea and the Land

第176集:空气、海洋与大地

the memory palace

历史

2025-02-25

21 分钟
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单集简介 ...

Order The Memory Palace book now, dear listener. On Bookshop.org, on Amazon.com, on Barnes & Noble, or directly from Random House. Or order the audiobook at places like Libro.fm. The Memory Palace is a proud member of Radiotopia from PRX. Radiotopia is a collective of independently owned and operated podcasts that’s a part of PRX, a not-for-profit public media company. If you’d like to directly support this show, you can make a donation at Radiotopia.fm/donate. I have recently launched a newsletter. You can subscribe to it at thememorypalacepodcast.substack.com.  Order Eliza McGraw's wonderful new book, Astride: Women, Horses and a Partnership that Changed America.  This episode originally aired in February of 2021.  Music Unsayable by Brambles. Kola - Lighthouse Version by amiina A Nearer Sun by the Westerlies Duet, a Steve Reich composition, performed by Daniel Hope. Reading a Wave by Arp April by Kanazu Tomoyuki Latent Sonata by Brian McBride Notes The oral history mentioned in this episode is available through the Smithsonian Instittion’’s archives.
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单集文稿 ...

  • This episode was originally released four years.

  • Ago, in February of 2021, into what feels like a very different world.

  • It's called the Air and the Sea and the Land.

  • This is the Memory palace.

  • I'm Nate DiMeo.

  • During the 300 million or so years of the Paleozoic era, life thrived largely in the oceans.

  • Though later periods within it did see the first development of terrestrial life.

  • Your ferns, your extra large dragonflies.

  • But the ocean was where the action was.

  • Protocrustaceans and arthropods and evolution's first stabs at a workable fish.

  • The apex predators were the nautiloids.

  • We still have them today.

  • You may have seen them at the aquarium in a darkened tank,

  • cast in an eerie blue light to simulate their deep sea homes.

  • They are so strange, like ambulatory ram's horns with a peculiar white eye and a beard of tentacles.

  • They are among the most alien looking creatures we have.

  • A remnant of a time when the Earth was a very different place.

  • There are six species of nautiloids now,

  • but paleontologists tell us that in the Paleozoic there were many more,

  • varying significantly, some tiny, some gargantuan, relatively as far as mollusks go.