Croak & Dagger: Following the Trail of a Herpetologist Spy 40
bmahersciwriter writes "When Rafe Brown started doing field research in the Philippines, he constantly found himself in the long shadow of Edward Taylor, an irascible giant of herpetology (the study of amphibians) from the mid-20th century, whose legacy was tarnished by accusations of fraud, questions about his naming methods, and rumours of a double life working for the U.S. government. Brown forged a bond with his predecessor and has begun to restore a collection of Taylor's specimens that were lost during the Second World War, and which could aid in allocating resources for conservation. He has meanwhile found out more about Taylor's extracurricular activities, which included work with the organization that would eventually become the CIA."
Sounds like a movie (Score:1)
Doctor of Archaeology finds himself battling Nazis for possession of a relic of supernatural power...
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Oh man, what a great movie plot. If they ever make it into a movie, I hope they cast Harrison Ford, he did a great job playing Han Solo in Star Wars A New Hope and Empire Strikes Back.
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Oh man, what a great movie plot. If they ever make it into a movie, I hope they cast Harrison Ford, he did a great job playing Han Solo in Star Wars A New Hope and Empire Strikes Back.
Yeah, but I just remembered something ... he hates snakes.
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Bob from '80 here. I'm worried about where the fashion is trending, too; it'll be a dull future with everyone in plain white robes and shaved heads. I'll get right to work on changing that --- see if I can turn it in a completely different direction. A bit of lottery money would probably help with that (March 3, if you please).
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Herpetology (Score:1)
I really thought it was the study of Herpes.. me and my cold sore are sad :(
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Nope....but it also includes reptiles.
Why Herpetology Studies Reptiles and Amphibians (Score:5, Informative)
But herpes and herpetology are etymologically related. The Greek verb herpyzo means to creep or crawl (apologies for using Latin letters, I've tried Greek on /. before and it isn't pretty). So a herpeton is a creeping thing: i.e. snakes, lizards, salamanders, etc. Thus we end up with the study of creeping things or herpetology.
Herpes became the Greek word for shingles (herpes zoster in the medical books) because it was a creeping (or lurking) disease. It would seem to be gone but would lurk about only to resurface again. It was only natural, therefore, to apply it to what we commonly call herpes now (herpes simplex).
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Gene names, they're working on replacing the ones with memorable names as well. Catch22 and sonic hedgehog, for example.
Herpetology (Score:4, Informative)
Herpetology is the study of reptiles and amphibians.
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And before anyone ask "how's this news for nerds?" has obviously never had a herp-keeper as an acquaintance. I was a fish-guy (40 tanks in my bedroom during college, ranging from shoeboxes to 75 gallons), so I understand the obsession, even going so far as to plan my rare weekends off to go collecting on my own. The "spy" aspect makes it even more fun.
Re:Herpetology (Score:4, Funny)
Your friend's name wasn't Augustus Fink-Nottle perchance?
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What, ho: off to the Drones, are we?
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And before anyone ask "how's this news for nerds?"...
Nobody asks that anymore. That hasn't been a Slashdot slogan since Dice Holdings took over.
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I know you form such shows as 'the Simpsons'.
woefully esoteric?
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Herpetology Definition (Score:1)
well (Score:2)
he only studied herpetology until he croaked.
Croak, heh! (Score:2)
My Favorite Science Article Today (Score:5, Interesting)
And yes, it WOULD make a great movie plot. The protagonist really is a spy. And he really is a herpetologist, And he's pretty good at both. His character flaws could easily be written to develop from his time in secrecy and from the unfair disqualification of his research. Brown is just an epilogue: 35 years after his death, it turns out his research was right. They don't even need good writers if they stick to what actually happened.
Picture of Edward Taylor, (Score:2)
the herpetologist, in his natural habitat:
https://i.chzbgr.com/maxW500/4541751296/h7D5F4C78/ [chzbgr.com]