Greetings–

Happy February! I hope that you, unlike me, aren’t greeting the new month with a rather unpleasant, unexpected snowstorm. If you need a little distraction between the roof-raking and snow-shoveling, here are a couple items:
 

An Ancient Genome And A Skipped Bit of Software

Last October, I wrote a column for the New York Times about the first ancient human genome recovered from Africa. Last week, however, I discovered that the scientists had made a small oversight in their analysis that led to a big problem in their conclusions.

I asked my editor what to do. Should we add a correction to my column? An update note?

Instead, my editor made the right call: just write a new column.

So I did. It was fun to follow up on the evolution of science, rather than just providing a snapshot of a single new paper.

 

The Lifespan Machine

For my new Science Happens video for Stat, I paid a visit to a lab where scientists observe thousands of little worms grow old and note the moment each of them die. No one has ever carried out such a precise observation of so many lifespans at once, and the experience has led these researchers to a pretty cosmic perspective on why we live as long as we do.

Added bonuses: cameos by Woody Allen and Monty Python. Watch it here.
 

The Talks

This week!–>February 11: “Is There A Future for In-Depth Science Journalism?” MIT Communication Forum Details here.

June 23-25: International Society for Evolution, Medicine, and Public Health, Plenary Lecture. Durham North Carolina. Here’s the meeting site.

July 31: I’ll be giving the keynote lecture at the annual meeting of the Botanical Society of America in Savannah
 

The End
 
As always, if you have friends who would enjoy getting this newsletter, please let them know they can sign up at http://tinyletter.com/carlzimmer.

You can also follow me on TwitterFacebook , LinkedIn, and Google+. And there’s always carlzimmer.com.

Best wishes, Carl

Originally published February 5, 2016. Copyright 2016 Carl Zimmer.