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December 29, 2014

The Ed's Up #65 - End of 2014 edition

In a break from journalistic tradition, I thought I’d put up an end-of-year list at the actual end of the year. I know! I promise to live less dangerously in 2015.

It’s been a good and gratifying year. I gave a TED talk, enjoyed my second year at National Geographic, and signed a deal to write a book about partnerships between animals and microbes (I Contain Multitudes, to be released in early 2016). Sincere thanks to everyone who read or listened to something I did in 2014. Here is a list of the work that I’m proudest of.

Longer reads:
  • The Unique Merger That Made You (and Ewe, and Yew). On the one freakish event that gave rise to all sophisticated life on the planet.
  • How malaria defeats our drugs. On the race to stop drug-resistant malaria.
  • There Is No ‘Healthy’ Microbiome. On the reality of the microbes that share our lives.
  • Coincidental killers. On how some microbes kill us by accident.
  • DIY diagnosis: how an extreme athlete uncovered her genetic flaw. On an extreme athlete who discovered the cause of her two genetic diseases.
Talks
  • My TED talk on parasites
  • An interview at NYU about science journalism
  • My Story Collider story about meeting David Attenborough and questioning our heroes. 
Blog posts
  • Electric Eels Can Remotely Control Their Prey’s Muscles
  • It’s Behind You! Robot Creates Feeling of Ghostly Presence
  • Deinocheirus Exposed: Meet The Body Behind the Terrible Hand
  • A Flood of Borrowed Genes at the Origins of Tiny Extremists
  • Cave-Exploring Snake Robot Gets Inspiration From Sidewinders
  • When You Move House, Your Microbial Aura Moves Too
  • One Species Becomes Two, Inside an Insect
  • You Almost Certainly Have Mites On Your Face
  • Seals May Have Carried Tuberculosis To The New World
  • A Swarm of a Thousand Cooperative, Self-Organising Robots
  • Octopus Cares For Her Eggs For 53 Months, Then Dies
  • Nature’s Most Amazing Eyes Just Got A Bit Weirder  
  • Extinct Humans Passed High-Altitude Gene to Tibetans
  • One Lichen Species Is Actually 126, And Probably More
  • The Barnacle That Eats Glowing Sharks  
  • Does Your Microbiological Age Match Your Biological One?  
  • The Silence of the Crickets, The Silence of the Crickets
  • The Surprising Closest Relative of the Huge Elephant Birds
  • Man-Made Electromagnetic Noise Disrupts a Bird’s Compass
  • Where’s All The Animal Vagina Research?
  • On Privilege and Luck, or Why Success Breeds Success
  • The Most Versatile Impressionist In the Forest
  • Sailfish Use Inescapable Face- Swords to Wound, Then Kill
  • In This Insect, Females Have Penises And Males Have Vaginas
  • The Tiny Culprit Behind A Graveyard of Ancient Whales
  • Now This Is How You Find Disease Genes
  • Study Of 1.5 Million Cows Shows Daughters Get More Milk Than Sons
  • The Mantis Shrimp Sees Like A Satellite
  • 80-Year-Old Vintage Snake Venom Can Still Kill  
  • In Saving A Species, You Might Accidentally Doom It 
See you all in 2015. Thanks for being here.

Ed
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