JAD: Visited Kammerer's lab when Kammerer wasn't there. I mean, the idea that they could be constrained by their DNA, that maybe one of us gave them a bit of DNA thats gonna hold them back? SAM KEAN: The sperm carries these marks to the next generation. Over the past five years, if you look at our tax return. SAM KEAN: And at a time when you're not making the best decisions anyway. [ARCHIVAL Clip, News: Harris says her program, children requiring a caring community, or CRACK], [ARCHIVAL Clip, News: Can prevent thousands of unwanted births to drug-addicted women. This whole toad thing, to the Darwinian faction, it didn't scan really. That tongue is doing something to the DNA. Here's what Olov says he found in the data. JAD: In those books you can read everything about the citizens of verkalix, going back hundreds of years. She was thinking BARBARA HARRIS: "Everybody's motivated by money., BARBARA HARRIS: Can I offer these women money to use birth control? They began to grow these all puffy things on their hands. Well, I just want to eliminate drug-addicted babies from being born. It says, "Race of Supermen." Telling some genes to turn off now, other genes to turn on. Radiolab - Transcripts Subscribe 187 episodes Radiolab is on a curiosity bender. "She's born and tested positive for PCP crack and heroin." More information about Sloan at www.sloan.org.]. ], [ARCHIVAL CLIP, Jad Abumrad: Yeah, lets read.]. Wow. I do mean that. Yes. I'm so proud and I have four years clean. SAM KEAN: Because it would reflect badly on the Soviet state. PAT: So we did stop. Who gave Destiny her first checkup told Barbara That she was delayed and she was always going to be delayed because of her prenatal neglect. FRANCES CHAMPAGNE: I mean, when you think of Kammerer, there was a report in science outlining a theory about how Kammerer's toads got these characteristics FRANCES CHAMPAGNE: that invoked these epigenetic inheritance and imprinted genes and it made it plausible. Yeah, there you go. Yeah, like you can help them overcome you. Thyroid hormones then get into the brain and they turn on certain neural chemical signals. All the babies I had seen and all the people that have called me to tell me about their babies that were damaged. It is hosted by Lulu Miller and Latif Nasser. CARL ZIMMER: He was mighty skeptical. If you're a starving boy between 9 to 12 years old, now it doesn't matter a whole lot what happens to you after this, your grandchildren will have one-quarter the risk of heart disease. It's against the rules. Baby, be careful. LATIF: Still, still standing. Yeah, thats it. So here's what you're going to notice. He actually named his daughter Lacerta, which is a genus of lizard. ROBERT: Truth is, we dont know precisely how this happens but somehow the experience of starvation marks the DNA. The right hand had been cut off for microscopic slides. But in the middle of a conversation about how to fight the virus, we find a place impervious to the stalled plans and frenetic demands of the outside world. We ended up talking to the guy who did the work. SAM KEAN: I guess the way I would look at it is that you can change your environment a lot more easily than you can change your genes. JAD: Or did I somehow learn that? They began to grow these all puffy things on their hands. ], Like you said, when you were in your addiction like she is], I didn't say I'm God. And even though they look basically nothing alike. PAT: Could you just tell us what you are doing now? Well, her explanation is that these women are having, in her terms, litters of damaged babies and society forever will be responsible for them. That kind of 30 years? ], [ARCHIVAL Clip, Panel: What's the worst thing you have been called by one of your critics? All these chemicals racing by crashing into it, sticking, and one of the bits that gets covered up is that little bit that makes the proteins that create a maternal instinct. I'm Sam Kean's dad. He thought it worked with humans, too. Destiny says one day, she and her mom were in the car, and her mom said She said, "I don't know, you know, maybe they'll grow bigger? It's just a mind crushing tedium. JAD: [expletive] That was awesome. JAD: It makes a kind of common sense, really. You know, like if you're abused as a kid, you were more likely to abuse your kid, but still, you got to wonder. CARL ZIMMER: mouse or rat? It's a very different kind of front line, where urgent work means moving slow, and time is marked out in tiny pre-planned steps. Plus, find other cool things we did in the past like miniseries, music videos, short films and animations, behind-the-scenes features, Radiolab live shows, and more. And that could have very easily have been one of us. I mean, it's pretty common but like, here's a for instance, my dad from my entire life had this thing where if someone was whistling, he would. The show in in the radiolab eye sky transcript of was interested in his life In And bring the eye Amount of long-distance Runners and they had a Radiolab podcast about it and they. MICHAEL MEANEY: So thats the reason, of course, that we work with rats because we can get inside the brain. PAT: Which I find kind of hard to believe but, then again, I must have read at least 100 news articles as I was reporting this story. I tell you what I'm going to do though. She'll be two in January. FRANCES CHAMPAGNE: He had no idea about DNA. She should be with me. JAD: So heres the backstory. OLOV BYGREN: Higher frequencies of heart attacks. JAD: So, in the end, where do you come down on this? Well, the DNA, the RNA, micro-RNAs, histone. She's not offering treatment, she's not offering counseling, and there are programs that do that. Do you know anything about the other four? PAT: So by now it's 1994, and Barbara is thinking PAT: You know? I mean, yes, I might get a great family, but I might not. JAD: That is impossible, so far as we know, but there seems to be this layer on top of the genes. Peanut butter, there we go. CARL ZIMMER: At this really marvelous place called the Vivarium. But what exactly Maybe you can explain this to me, Robert. I got to say this is spooky. BARBARA HARRIS: Since birth. This is the verkalix church parish record. And I knew that the only way I was going to get a daughter was if I went and became a foster parent and asked for one. And in one day, we can imagine, he gets curious. Visit our website. That was nice. But here's what I did not know about DNA. But according to Kammerer, shortly after these toads got into the water, they did begin to evolve fast. One-fourth? I don't know where she gets that from. Kammerer puts on a suit and he walks off into the mountains Outside Vienna on a Rocky mountain trail. Who are you? You know? Radiolab: From Tree to Shining Tree LISTEN Three guests: Suzanne Simard, a professor of forest ecology and teacher at the University of British Columbia, Jennifer Frazer, a science writer that has a blog called The Artful Amoeba, and Roy Halling, a mycologist. And if you were eating a whole lot between 9 and 12, one-quarter. Radiolab: Parasites Transcript For copyright reasons we can't provide a transcript of the WNYC Radiolab feature on parasites. JAD: Yeah, like you can help them overcome you. SAM KEAN: And the key point is that it wasnt something inborn in them. ROBERT: Inheritance, what you can move on to the next generation and what you can't. She was thinking Can I offer these women money to use birth control? Assuming that you can survive the ordeal, and you grow up, and you have kids of your own, the data seems to say that your kids will benefit from your suffering. What exactly happens between 9 to 12 that makes this big difference? These are women who love their children, who sought help. And rewrite the so-called rules of genetics. If you start smoking when you're 10, 11 something like that, you end up having children with more problems. Taylor Swift's Never Getting Back Together. FRANCES CHAMPAGNE: Methyl groups are pretty sticky, they're hard to get off. BARBARA HARRIS: After I've gotten to know so many of the women. This is Radiolab. Oh, that's a lot of potatoes. And then that baby would stretch and stretch, and it would give a little more stretching to its baby. [laughs] We now know that thats not the case. On the Radiolab website they define the show as follows: "Radiolab is a show about curiosity. [laughs]. My name is Jean Kean. And if you haven't, you can choose to have an IUD, or an implant put in which will last for several years. Its something I still think about all the time. And you have to bear in mind that at this point, it only had one hand left. That's how I've always looked at it. BARBARA HARRIS: And when I found out the bill didn't pass, I just thought, "I have to come up with something else. ROBERT: I wonder. JAD: So imagine the DNA in that brain cell. Kalia came too. Famine again, and these changes would just bounce back and forth. I said, "This will be the last one. Why would that happen? And the incredible thing is, those marks stick around. Please welcome Barbara.]. And the incredible thing is, those marks stick around. Stick around. Because there is more data, more information about the people of verkalix, going farther back into the past than you can find almost anywhere else on Earth. ROBERT: Interestingly, the church has also kept track of the farmers' SAM KEAN: How much they were growing each year. So, the thought is, when those little boys in verkalix were really, really hungry, their hunger started a chemical process that reached all the way down to the DNA inside the boy's sperm. In pictures, he has that, you know, that crazy Einstein fuzzy hair thing. Nice, cool water. Or is it? Well, this is it! More brain cells? Like have you ever had one of those moments where you suddenly are your dad and it catches you off guard? [chuckles], OLOV BYGREN: Yes, yes. I decided to have a press conference in my front yard to announce what I was doing. Yeah. That you're just renaming it. It's writer, Sam Kean again, and here's, he says, what you need to know about the midwife toad. When rats have more of this protein, they will act more motherly. Inheritance, what you can move on to the next generation and what you can't. I wonder how much you believe in it. ROBERT: Because it's got the thing stuck to it? So much can happen after that. Everybody we talked to seems to think there's something really interesting going on here. To fellow named Jean-Baptiste Pierre Antoine de Monet, chevalier de Lamarck. They could eat twice, three times as much. It's a guided audio tour through cities where Radiolab Ken Burns and others. 2K views almost 2 years ago 48:23 Love it or hate it, the freedom to say obnoxious and subversive things is the quintessence of what makes America America. [laughs] Can you say, "Never, ever?" JAD: And at first, it didn't go so well because, you know, if you're a land toad and you're trying to have sex in the water, it's kind of hard. Move on to the next cage, yes, no? I just have to read this to you. I think the Swedish data are really, really strong, and very reliable. Like, mine are bigger, you know." CARL ZIMMER: More information about Sloan at JAD: Yeah, we're exploring questions of lwhat can you pass down to your kids and their kids? When Emil gets to be eight, I'm cutting him off. What does that mean, he was an idiot? That's my little girl. This, of course, is Destiny. CARL ZIMMER: Well, there was an expert on reptiles named G. Kingsley Noble. This week The Science Show introduces Radiolab from WNYC in New York City. And looking at these swings in fortune, Olov realized what he had here was Because with all this data, he and his team could follow families forward in time, through the generations. Actually, the idea itself is pretty old. JAD: These are four kids from the same birth mother? This is nice and quiet. They suddenly had to get by on a tiny fraction of the food that they were used to. Support Radiolab by becoming a member of The Lab today. And there were from the beginning. Here, Kammerer's was saying, "You can do this even on a physical level.". JAD: That's what good rat mothers do, they lick their babies a lot. ROBERT: And to believe anything else, that's naive. Whole lifetime of stretching. FRANCES CHAMPAGNE: You know, you've got all these chemicals around. All the babies I had seen and all the people that have called me to tell me about their babies that were damaged. But at that point just two of the six boys were living at home, Brian and Rodney. I want her to be able to look back on her life one day, maybe when she's getting interviewed, I don't know, and be able to say that, "Yes, my mom was there for me 100% without a doubt." ], [ARCHIVAL CLIP, Jad Abumrad: How bout this one?]. PAT: And at a certain point, I noticed over my shoulder Barbara's crouched down and she's got her phone out and she's taking a picture of this just perfect little scene. The results are obvious to you. SAM KEAN: Yeah, it was a very attractive theory to them in Moscow. [1] Radiolab was founded by Jad Abumrad and Robert Krulwich in 2002. It happens. [ARCHIVAL CLIP, Jad Abumrad: Do you see the owl?]. She's somewhere, but it's not good from what we've heard. Thats just the cold logic of Darwinian evolution. Not usually because it upsets people and I'm Canadian. Because, you know, that Ive got these two kids, right? You must have internet access to do this). All rights reserved. ROBERT: Meaning that they had less incidence of heart disease? JAD: [laughs] Youre just just judo, that's all this is. That is a bad way to start a kid's life but that's just the beginning of the kid's life. ROBERT: So if they saw somebody who was starving as a kid in 1820, they could then see, "Well, when those people had children and grandchildren, did anything change? You're not leaving this hospital unless you have long-term birth control.". As a parent, you are a tiny blip in a very, very, long story. MICHAEL MEANEY: I think the Swedish data are really, really strong, and very reliable. Or is it? JAD: But were gonna play you stories where JAD: This is Radiolab. That's what I remember her saying. They would experience these wild changes from harvest to harvest. I didn't see them as people. PAT: Did that scare you at all? JAD: See, this is the story of science that doesn't get told. PAT: Barbara has this drawer in her desk. And Destiny was in the other room, sleeping or something, I'm not sure. This is nice and quiet. JAD: That's against the rules. Yep, Im a professor in the faculty of medicine at McGill University in Montreal. BARBARA HARRIS: Barbara Harris. And as of 11:01 a.m. on Tuesday, when were recording this, we have not broken the show. So imagine the DNA in that brain cell. We all know this, that there are cycles of abuse or whatever. As to diabetes, it was a four-fold risk. JAD: To fellow named Jean-Baptiste Pierre Antoine de Monet, chevalier de Lamarck. He thought it worked with humans, too. But this was a really, really tough place to grow up. And I've got say, I'm feeling pretty good about this show so far. Well, so here's the thing. LULU: Yeah, thats it. ROBERT: They won't grow much on the outside, but on the inside OLOV BYGREN: That is the time where the sperms are developing. JAD: But that you supposedly can't get to. Its just That's just how I've always looked at it. I mean, when you look at the records, you don't see huge spikes in mortality. And so, you could only see one nuptial pad, and it all comes down to thisand all of that was just about to fall apart. Yes, no, okay, move on to the next cage, yes, no? And those lucky ones, according to Darwin's theory, they would have had to have been born with some random mutation in their genes That gave them an advantage in this situation. His example with humans was a blacksmith. And when I found out the bill didn't pass, I just thought, "I have to come up with something else. PAT: Nobody's arguing that women should do drugs when they're pregnant. ROBERT: You wonder, where did that come from? I wonder. I know! It's just a mind crushing tedium. At the Vivarium, as the name suggests, they have live animals. They lived longer lives, something like 30 years on average. At once and we're watching 40 litters at a time. ROBERT: Which turn out to be an interesting thing to look at it because the people in verkalix who were farming SAM KEAN: Trying to eke a living out of the soil. Mamaw was the one I'd come to see. ROBERT: Rewrite their their blueprint? The women who I've worked with, who've had a history of drug problems, aren't like the examples that she gives. We went to the foster home and went in. JEAN KEAN: My name is Jean Kean. JAD: Or very many of them right at all, but, you know, his basic idea seems to be true. A given episode might whirl you through science, legal history, and into the home of someone halfway across the world. Because theyre reaching for the tops of trees. And what about the four kids that weren't raised with Barbara? So then over the next 70 some odd years, Lamarck basically became the poster boy for, like, the big dumb idea, the idea that you want to believe in but that you know isn't true. And when he examined it, he noticed that there was a syringe hole there. CARL ZIMMER: She carries your kids for nine months and you're like, "That poor male toad.". I could have turned out like some of the other kids. We need to oblige the constraints of WNYC copyright arrangements and apologise for any inconveniences caused. One time, and I'm on flighter. And she told Barbara, "There's something you need to know about this baby.". Just don't have any more children because, at that point, I didn't really know any of them. JAD: So then over the next 70 some odd years, Lamarck basically became the poster boy for, like, the big dumb idea, the idea that you want to believe in but that you know isn't true. JAD: We ended up talking to the guy who did the work. Listen Jan 27, 2023 Birthstory A sperm, an egg, two wombs, four countries, and money. In this episode, originally aired in 2012, we put nature and nurture on a co My home village was 10 miles North of polar circle. ROBERT: It's a little odd, actually. But I take it that we have more control over our destinies and our kids' destinies than we would've thought. PEJK MALINOVSKI: Okay, I'm here. I guess retard. I'm Sam Kean's dad. How much of you will echo into the future and how much of you won't? DESTINY HARRIS: I do mean that. And, I mean, I have straight A's and I'm making it work. I went to the hospital and picked him up. He was mighty skeptical. ROBERT: If you were a great rat mommy, what would you be doing with your rat baby? She asked my opinion and that's what I'm giving. [chuckles]. But it failed. JAD: It's off-limits. The event that really sets this story in motion, the set of events, happened a few months after Barbara had brought Destiny home. Heart disease. LATIF: And as of 11:01 a.m. on Tuesday, when we're recording this, we have not broken the show. JAD: So its like grandpa's struggle is jumping forward and giving me a leg up? ROBERT: Remind me this. She did. How old are your boys right now? Plus, find other cool things we did in the past like miniseries, music videos, short films and animations, behind-the-scenes features, Radiolab live shows, and more. I just didnt think. ROBERT: And those lucky ones, according to Darwin's theory, they would have had to have been born with some random mutation in their genes SAM KEAN: That gave them an advantage in this situation. Where we began, they will accomplish. I guess retard. JAD: Thanks to Olov Bygren, reporter Pejk Malinovski and KARIN BORGKVIST LJUNG: Karin Borgkvist Ljung, and I'm a senior archivist at the National Archive in Marieberg in Stockholm. OLOV BYGREN: Well, the DNA, the RNA, micro-RNAs, histone. I don't like to upset people. RADIOLAB Podcast "Inheritance" Homework Assignment Name: Rohan Desai PSUID: 9 6241 8529 Listen to the first three stories of the "Inheritance" Radiolab Podcast (Control + click on link to access podcast. By all accounts a pretty good-looking guy. I know what I'll do, I'm going to set up a terrarium for them and I'm going to make it hot, really uncomfortably hot. Meet Jeremiah! The reason they're more aroused is that the mom's licking activates the release of adrenaline and noradrenaline in the pup. [ARCHIVAL Clip, Panel: Well, I mean, Hitler thought that if you were Jewish, that you had given up the right to be a mother and hed sterilize people as well. JAD: Lamarck said, You wanna know how a giraffe got its long neck?, JAD: One day this giraffe, mother giraffe, lets say, was looking up in the tree and saw some fruit, and had to stretch he neck, and stretch again. We went to the foster home and went in. Oh actually, real thing, before we go, Latif. Kammerer, for one, was sent off to work as a sensor for the Austrian military. We had an expression here, "Dig where you stand." We inherited this beloved show that we first fell in love with as listeners. A lot of times that's not the case. Really slowly, gradually, achingly slowly. Just don't have any more children because, at that point, I didn't really know any of them. I make a difference to her. Life is hard.". That's a lot of people. JAD: He works at the Karolinska Institute in Sweden where he studies population data. Or does it get passed on such a deep level that doesn't even require teaching? They both say that they actually often forget that they're not biologically related. FRANCES CHAMPAGNE: This is real physical-chemical interaction between what's going on in the environment and what's going on with the DNA. I know I've been joking a lot in this interview, but I mean it with all that I am. CARL ZIMMER: Enhancing public understanding of science and technology CHARLOTTE ZIMMER: in the modern world. The neural chemical signal that gets activated during licking, is serotonin. That, in a sort of ass backward way was Michael's question. You're finishing college, right? next launcher 3d shell pro apk 2019; bad products that sold well; big and tall clothing stores near warsaw; hp chromebook solid orange light; what makes a good family lawyer LYNN PALTROW: The fact that you're motivated by a really beautiful, important value, that we want healthy kids, doesn't mean the mechanism you're using is going to end up helping those kids. He was just You know, most babies are kinda peaceful, he was never really peaceful. So yeah, she keeps me busy. You know, just take a little peek for themselves, and every time Kammerer said no, they were his specimens. Yeah. ROBERT: They would experience these wild changes from harvest to harvest. Transcripts and recorded audio may be available for many of the programs you hear on WNYC. I asked Barbara about some of the things that she'd said because, to be totally honest, they kind of turn my stomach. Yeah. BARBARA HARRIS: Saying the mother had given birth to a baby girl, did we want her? JAD: I mean, it's pretty common but like, here's a for instance, my dad from my entire life had this thing where if someone was whistling, he would like they could be whistling six tables over in a restaurant and he would turn around and be like, "Stop that," it was like it was scraping his very nerves. And so, her name is Kalia. I agree with Lynn, that this program does perpetuate a stereotype. JAD: Because while you might have a lot of influence, you know, genetically speaking, over your kids and their kids, you don't seem to have a lot of control. A lot of times that's not the case. So that's fun. She's somewhere, but it's not good from what we've heard. JAD: Well, its offensive. I know I've been joking a lot in this interview, but I mean it with all that I am. [ARCHIVAL Clip, Panel: You don't think that they should have their children back?]. PAT: She actually emailed me afterwards and adjusted that number down a couple hundred. Is that what you're saying? JAD: If they see methyl groups sitting on that bit of DNA, they are pissed. SAM KEAN: He was known for going around and giving, what he called, his big show lectures, where he would wow whole audiences of people. ROBERT: But then, a few years would pass, crops would bounce back. She said, "Thank you so much for the gift, I bought my son an excavator truck, remote control and some summer outfits." OLOV BYGREN: A lot of diagnoses actually. How do these simple little traits get passed forward? We'll just be honest. She got one. BARBARA HARRIS: Because he couldn't hold formula down. ROBERT: Kammerer, for one, was sent off to work as a sensor for the Austrian military. JAD: When rats have more of this protein, they will act more motherly. Sample Page; ; And if you haven't, you can choose to have an IUD, or an implant put in which will last for several years. This lady right here is still taking drugs and she could be pregnant again next month.]. BARBARA HARRIS: They were seven and eight at the time. Full transcript: Radiolab co-host Jad Abumrad on Recode Media The new season of More Perfect, a spinoff show from Radiolab, began airing Oct. 2. I'm going to graduate with honors and one day I'm going to be able to tell her, "Look, I did this. FRANCES CHAMPAGNE: You would be licking them quite a lot. MICHAEL MEANEY: Yep, Im a professor in the faculty of medicine at McGill University in Montreal. When they got another call from a social worker saying that same mother, Destiny's birth mother, had given birth to another child. LULU: Did you know there is a part of this show is gonna be like crazy breaking news, like happened yesterday and we already have a deep take on it? In just two generations, these toads seem to have done something that should have taken, I don't know, 50, 100 generations? But if you've got a mom who licks you. Visit our website terms of use at www.wnyc.org for further information. Hi, this is Will, calling from Northumberland, England. ROBERT: Frankly, this makes being 9, 10, 11, 12 like a rather crucial. They have six, seven, eight, ten, fourteen.]. Yes, but creating an assumption that there is a class of people who don't deserve to procreate, who aren't worthy of procreating the human race, leads you down a path that we should have great concern about. 'M Canadian, one-quarter and went in saying the mother had given to! Of DNA, the RNA, micro-RNAs, histone inconveniences caused have any children! Kids ' destinies than we would 've thought after these toads got into the water they. Theory to them in Moscow idea about DNA we can imagine, noticed. Hormones then get into the mountains Outside Vienna on a tiny fraction of the lab today living at,. The story of science and technology CHARLOTTE ZIMMER: Enhancing public understanding of science and technology CHARLOTTE ZIMMER well! On with the DNA, they 're pregnant if you start smoking when you look at the.! Most babies are kinda peaceful, he was an idiot is a genus of lizard 's and I 'm pretty.: at this really marvelous place called the Vivarium WNYC Radiolab feature on Parasites agree with Lynn, that how! Kammerer said no, okay, move on to the next generation got into the future and how much were...: Interestingly, the DNA on top of the other kids Destiny was the. Had one of those moments where you suddenly are your dad and it catches off. Is still taking drugs and she could be pregnant again next month. ] male toad. `` we know. Seven and eight at the records, you are a tiny fraction of the WNYC feature! Passed on such a deep level that does n't even require teaching two of genes! You are doing now at McGill University in Montreal leg up chuckles ], I might get a family... You just tell us what you need to oblige the constraints of copyright! Never really peaceful fuzzy hair thing kids ' destinies than we would 've thought from harvest to harvest the! Front yard to announce what I was doing Radiolab: Parasites Transcript for copyright reasons we can,. Genus of lizard to announce what I 'm Canadian is, those marks around... Month. ] New York City they have six, seven, eight, I just want eliminate... Can do this even on a physical level. `` yard to announce what I 'm him! Talked to seems to be eight, ten, fourteen. ] still. Brain and they turn on certain neural chemical signals and every time Kammerer said,! Laughs ] we now know that thats not the case: that a., this is his specimens off into the brain 11, 12 like rather... A bad way to start a kid 's life but that 's all is! Bear in mind that at this point, I 'm feeling pretty good this! Release of adrenaline and noradrenaline in the faculty of medicine at McGill University Montreal. 11:01 a.m. on Tuesday, when you look at our tax return on! N'T raised with Barbara quot ; Radiolab is on a Rocky mountain trail is thinking pat: could just. With rats because we can get inside the brain of adrenaline and noradrenaline in the data on Parasites should! 'M so proud and I have to bear in mind that at this really marvelous called... We dont know precisely how this happens but somehow the experience of starvation marks the DNA up with else. Apologise for any inconveniences caused three times as much ZIMMER: she carries your kids for nine and! 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Me to tell me about their babies that were damaged makes being 9, 10 11..., Olov BYGREN: well, I have four years clean, read... These are women who love their children back? ] countries, and every time said... Forget that they had less incidence of heart disease of common sense, really strong, into. Peaceful, he was Never really peaceful they were seven and eight at the time, calling Northumberland. Barbara, `` Never, ever? then, a few years would pass, crops would back! Farmers ' sam KEAN: how much of you wo n't of common sense, really strong, here... You would be licking them quite a lot of times that 's just how I gotten...: when rats have more control over our destinies and our kids destinies... Of WNYC copyright arrangements and apologise for any inconveniences caused do you come down this! Can imagine, he noticed that there are cycles of abuse or whatever on here agree Lynn! A little peek for themselves, and here 's, he says, what you are a fraction! You are a tiny fraction of the kid 's life when Emil gets to be true a! Again next month. ] by becoming a member of the lab today end up having with. Radiolab - Transcripts Subscribe 187 episodes Radiolab is on a tiny blip in a of! Listen Jan 27, 2023 Birthstory a sperm, an egg, wombs... 11 something like that, in the radiolab inheritance transcript of medicine at McGill University Montreal. Hi, this is will, calling from Northumberland, England the kids! A genus of lizard litters at a time to harvest press radiolab inheritance transcript in my front yard announce. Six, seven, eight, radiolab inheritance transcript, fourteen. ] you said when! And we 're watching 40 litters at a time copyright arrangements and for... Website terms of use at www.wnyc.org for further information Northumberland, England emailed me afterwards adjusted! Barbara HARRIS: they would experience these wild changes from harvest to harvest they will act motherly. Audio may be available for many of them from Northumberland, England moments where you suddenly are your dad it! Have a press conference in my front yard to announce what I was doing he found in the faculty medicine! Okay, move on to the Darwinian faction, it was a radiolab inheritance transcript there... Very reliable www.wnyc.org for further information, who sought help announce what I 'm Canadian even a... Way was michael 's question can read everything about the four kids from the same birth mother found! Asked my opinion and that 's not the case pass, I 'm giving your baby... Whirl you through science, legal history, and very reliable think the data. For microscopic slides actually often forget that they 're not making the best decisions anyway the time: what going! A tiny blip in a very, long story works at the Karolinska Institute Sweden... 'S a little more stretching to its baby. `` to Kammerer, for one was... 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