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Quantum fluctuations in science, space and society, from quarks to Hubble and Mars. Served up by Alan Boyle, NBC News Digital science editor. E-mail Alan, or connect via Facebook, Twitter or Google+.

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  • 16
    Dec
    2012
    5:02pm, EST

    Middle Earth spotted from orbit

    NASA

    New Zealand's North and South Island are highlighted in this 2002 image from NASA's Terra satellite.

    By Alan Boyle, Science Editor, NBC News

    Follow @b0yle


    The movies based on "The Lord of the Rings" and now "The Hobbit" have turned a spotlight on the dramatic landscapes of New Zealand, and this image from about 450 miles up gives you a wide-screen perspective on a modern-day Middle Earth.

    The readings that went into creating the nearly cloud-free view of the Pacific island nation were captured by the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer aboard NASA's Terra satellite during passes in late 2002. That's just about the time that the second movie in the "Lord of the Rings" trilogy, "The Two Towers," was making a splash at the box office.

    Now New Zealand filmmaker Peter Jackson has come out with the first movie of his next trilogy, based on J.R.R. Tolkien's tales of dwarfs and hobbits, a dragon and a treasure in a mythical place called Middle Earth. "The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey" grabbed plenty of box-office treasure this weekend — $84.8 million, which translates into the best-ever three-day opening in December. (On the overall ranking for three-day openings, however, "The Hobbit" is No. 40.)

    New Zealand is hoping for treasure as well: It provided more than $100 million in support for the moviemakers, and hopes to reap hundreds of millions of dollars in tourist trade sparked by the films. The country provided the backdrop for film locales ranging from the pastures of Hobbiton (near Matamata) to the volcanoes of Mordor (near Taupo). The airport in Wellington, which is New Zealand's capital as well as the home of Jackson's film operation, calls itself "the Middle of Middle Earth." Air New Zealand is now known as the "airline of Middle Earth."

    To learn more about the "Hobbit" connection, check out this tale of my visit to Hobbiton, as well as our slideshow of film locales in New Zealand and our five favorite jumping-off points for adventures in Kiwi Land. To learn more about Terra's picture of New Zealand, head on over to the NASA Visible Earth website. And to see more views of Earth from space, click on these links from the Cosmic Log Space Advent Calendar:

    Follow @CosmicLog
    • 2012 Cosmic Log Space Advent Calendar
    • Day 1: A fantastic Chinese fan
    • Day 2: Satellite shows a Grander Canyon
    • Day 3: Typhoon stirs awe — and alarm
    • Day 4: Glittering nighttime view of Riyadh
    • Day 5: Night lights shine on 'Black Marble'
    • Day 6: Holy sites seen at night
    • Day 7: Blue Marble still leaves its mark
    • Day 8: Satellites look into a volcano's hell
    • Day 9: Jack Frost nipping at Alaska's nose
    • Day 10: Cosmonaut looks down on peaks
    • Day 11: Earth looms above moonwalker
    • Day 12: Skytree casts shadow on Tokyo
    • Day 13: Aurora sets stage for meteor show
    • Day 14: Apollo's last look at Earthrise
    • Day 15: A sobering moment from space
    • 2011 Cosmic Log Space Advent Calendar
    • 2010 Cosmic Log Space Advent Calendar

    Alan Boyle is NBCNews.com's science editor. Connect with the Cosmic Log community by "liking" the log's Facebook page, following @b0yle on Twitter and adding the Cosmic Log page to your Google+ presence. To keep up with Cosmic Log as well as NBCNews.com's other science and space news coverage, sign up for the Tech & Science newsletter, delivered via email. You can also check out "The Case for Pluto," my book about dwarf planets and the search for new worlds.

    17 comments

    Technically, Middle-earth (as it should be written) 'exists' "equivalent in latitude to the coastlands of Europe and the north shores of the Mediterranean. ... If Hobbiton and Rivendell are taken (as intended) to be at about the latitude of Oxford, then Minas Tirith, 600 miles south, is at about the …

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    Explore related topics: space, hobbit, movies, featured, the-hobbit, cosmic-log, tech-science, holiday-calendar, 2012-holiday-calendar
  • 30
    Mar
    2012
    10:54pm, EDT

    Why we love to fear dragons

    HBO

    A freshly hatched dragon perches on the shoulder of Daenerys in "Game of Thrones."

    By Alan Boyle, Science Editor, NBC News

    Follow @b0yle




    This the Year of the Dragon, and not just because of the Chinese calendar: Dragons play big roles in HBO's "Game of Thrones" TV series as well as the upcoming film version of "The Hobbit." Those fire-breathing, leathery-winged reptiles have been gripping the human imagination with their sharp talons for millennia, and it's worth wondering why.

    Some folklorists trace the dragon myth back to a variety of sources in ancient China, Rome, Greece and India, and speculate that it had its genesis in the discovery of fossil bones from the strange creatures we now know as dinosaurs:


    • Scythian lore described griffins with lionlike bodies and birdlike beaks. In the year 77, Pliny the Elder passed down the Scythian stories of gold-guarding griffins with peculiar ears and wings.
    • During his travels in northern India, the first-century Greek philosopher Apollonius of Tyana reported that "no mountain ridge was without" a dragon to its name. The locals said they used magic to lure the dragons out of the earth and pry out the gems embedded in their skulls.
    • Chinese accounts of "dragon bones" go back thousands of years — and as recently as 2006, ground-up dinosaur bones were being used in traditional medicine by villagers who believed they came from dragons. (The hard-to-crack dragon eggs depicted in "Game of Thrones" may well trace their lineage back to fossilized dinosaur eggs.)

    Classical folklorist Adrienne Mayor, who relates all these tales in her book "The First Fossil Hunters," ascribes the reports to discoveries in fossil-rich regions such as the Altai Mountains in Central Asia, the Gobi Desert in China and Mongolia, or the Siwalik Hills in the Himalayas. Not knowing any better, adventurers interpreted the dinosaur bones as representing the remains of dragons, griffins and other mythical monsters.

    The gold hoarding? That may have arisen because gold deposits were found close to the fossil beds along ancient Issedonian trade routes.

    And the gems? "I think the Indian lore about special gems prised out of dragon skulls alludes to the crystals that can form on mineralized bones," Mayor wrote. "The detailed observations of the first modern investigator of the Siwalik fossils confirm my theory: large, glittering calcite crystals and tubular selenite crystals are common in the Siwalik fossils."

    Hard-wired for dragons?
    Anthropologist David Jones went even further in his book "An Instinct for Dragons," published in 2000: He proposed that the fables about winged, poison-spewing, fanged and clawed creatures combined three of the top threats to ancient pre-human primates: raptors like the one that may have preyed on a now-fossilized ape-boy known as the Taung child nearly 2 million years ago; poisonous snakes like the ones that may have driven the evolution of big brains and improved vision in primates millions of years ago; and big cats like the ones our pre-human ancestors had to watch out for in Africa.

    "The world-dragon was formed by the nature of our own shadowy progenitors' encounters with the creatures who hunted them over millions of years," Jones wrote. The way he sees it, our brain came to be hard-wired with an instinctive fear of dragons.

    Paul Jordan-Smith, a folklorist and storyteller who wrote a fiery critique of Jones' book for the journal Western Folklore, thinks the idea that our ancestors somehow evolved a dragon instinct just doesn't hold up. For one thing, Jones' claim that multiple cultures had the same conception of dragons as dangerous beasts is "demonstrably untrue," he said.

    "My take on the mythic image of the dragon is that there is no one 'authentic' image, and no one 'true' meaning," Jordan-Smith told me in an email. "The dragon has been a guardian, a thief, a hoarder (like Smaug, in 'The Hobbit') and a dispenser of wisdom (especially in Chinese tales)."

    For another thing, the dragon doesn't show up fully formed in ancient tales.

    "It's interesting that dragons do not appear in cave paintings," Jordan-Smith wrote. "What does appear are the beasts that they hunted or that were dangerous. ... Where you do see constructs that aren't literal depictions, they're of humans merged with animals. And when you get civilization, you don't see dragons until much later. ... You don't get dragons until you get stories that have dragons in them."

    Who's gripping whom?
    But once dragons become part of a culture's mythic milieu, they don't fade away. Perhaps that explains why dragons hang around, in Chinese New Year festivals, in European fairy tales, and in American movies and TV shows. Here's what Jordan-Smith had to say about that:

    "A dragon, like most mythic imagery, is 'plastic,' in the sense of being adaptable. It can look like whatever the singer of tales wants it to, can serve whatever purpose needed, and can mean just about anything. And some of the traditional qualities may not be incompatible with one another. A dragon that guards a treasure (or an abducted maiden) may be waiting for the right hero that will liberate it from its responsibility. A dragon that threatens to destroy a village may be a wake-up call to rectify misdeeds. Some dragons are enchanted and must be slain to regain their true form. But not all dragons are meant to be slain.

    "And what of the hero? He must be changed somehow by the encounter, or else the game is not worth the candle. But what kind of change? In some cultures, to slay a fearsome beast was tantamount to assimilating its powers. ... In Tolkien's books, the Ring exerts its power so thoroughly that its wearer little by little becomes like Gollum. Perhaps there's a particular kind of danger, much more deadly than merely being killed. And perhaps when the hero slays the dragon, he himself is slain, to be reborn as the human incarnation of the dragon. For good or ill? Ask the storyteller."

    Follow @CosmicLog

    Maybe it's not the dragon that has a grip on us. Maybe we're the ones who are hanging onto the dragon — and we don't want to let go.

    More about dragons and 'Game of Thrones':

    • Origin of Komodo dragons revealed
    • Chinese villagers ate dinosaur 'dragon bones'
    • Sword science plays a role in 'Game of Thrones'
    • All about 'Game of Thrones' on The Clicker

    Alan Boyle is msnbc.com's science editor. Connect with the Cosmic Log community by "liking" the log's Facebook page, following @b0yle on Twitter or adding Cosmic Log's Google+ page to your circle. You can also check out "The Case for Pluto," my book about the controversial dwarf planet and the search for other worlds.

    46 comments

    Dragons are indeed in our imagination. I liked the thought that they are plastic, meaning malleable, changeable in what they actually are. Our most prominent Dragonlady, Anne MccAffrey passed away this year.

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  • 11
    Jan
    2011
    12:01am, EST

    Will 'hobbit' tooth yield ancient DNA?

    Richard Lewis / AP file

    The identity of the "hobbit" fossil skull, shown here at center, has been debated since it was discovered on the Indonesian island in 2003. A new attempt to extract DNA from a tooth excavated from the island in 2009 may yield answers.

    By John Roach, Contributing Writer, NBC News

    Scientists are gearing up to use a new drilling technique to extract ancient DNA from an 18,000-year-old tooth that belonged to a "hobbit," the mysterious, diminutive creatures that once lived on the Indonesian island of Flores.

    If successful, a comparison of the DNA with other species could help resolve disputes surrounding who the hobbits were and where they originated.

    Peter Brown, a paleoanthropologist at the University of New England in Armidale, Australia, described and named the species Homo floresiensis in 2004, though he and other scientists now suspect the hobbit's ancestors may have left Africa before the genus Homo evolved.


    Other researchers contend the approximately 4-foot-tall hobbits were modern humans who perhaps suffered a genetic condition that causes dwarfing, or were nutritionally deficient.

    New technique
    Previous attempts to extract DNA from a hobbit tooth excavated in 2003 failed, including one effort by a team based at the Australian Center for Ancient DNA. Some members of that team are involved with the new attempt on a tooth excavated from the Liang Bua cave on Flores in 2009, Nature News reports.

    The previous failures may be due to techniques used to extract DNA, according to Christina Adler, a geneticist at ACAD who is leading the new attempt.

    She and her colleagues found that while most genetic research on ancient teeth focuses on inner tooth tissue, which is called dentin, the coating of the root, called cementum, is a source of richer DNA. In addition, teams often drill into teeth at the relatively high speed of 1,000 revolutions per minute, which generates heat that rapidly destroys DNA. Going slower — 100 rpm — appears to alleviate the problem.

    These results have been accepted for publication in the Journal of Archaeological Science.

    Adler and her colleagues will target cementum and drill at the slower speed when they attempt to extract DNA from the premolar excavated in 2009.

    Chances at success?
    Whether the technique will work is unknown. "No attempts at getting DNA from fossils from warm climes have been successful so far," Richard Potts, director of the human origins program at the Smithsonian Institution, told me today via e-mail.

    But once a technique to extract ancient DNA is proven successful, he added, "it is only a matter of time before the African roots of Homo sapiens are explored with the technique, which will enable researchers to test ideas that have arisen about Neanderthals, the possibility of interbreeding with Homo sapiens, and other questions besides the intriguing ones about the hobbits."

    Matthew Collins, a specialist in ancient protein analysis at the University of York in Britain, told Nature News that the tropical climate on Flores has probably fragmented the ancient DNA in the hobbit tooth too much to yield worthwhile results. The ACAD scientists, however, will press ahead, encouraged by their successful extraction of DNA from a 6,000-year-old pig tooth from the site in 2007, according to Nature News.

    More stories on the "hobbit" controversy:

    • Ancient hobbit-sized human species discovered
    • Scientists say 'hobbit' was not modern human
    • Hobbit or not? Species debate flares up
    • Virtual reality maps real-life 'Hobbit' brain
    • Hobbits linked to nutritional deficiency
    • Indonesian villages cashing in on 'hobbit' craze

    John Roach is a contributing writer for msnbc.com. Connect with the Cosmic Log community by hitting the "like" button on the Cosmic Log Facebook page or following msnbc.com's science editor, Alan Boyle, on Twitter (@b0yle).

    35 comments

    Get their DNA and clone them into a Hobbit Park

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    Explore related topics: hobbit, science, genetics, featured, john-roach

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