Editing 2630: Shuttle Skeleton
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==Explanation== | ==Explanation== | ||
− | + | {{incomplete|Created by a NEBULA DESERT HORSE - Please change this comment when editing this page. Do NOT delete this tag too soon.}} | |
− | + | As the understanding of the natural world developed, many taxonomic misconceptions were overturned, or at least the scientific terminology was tightened. For instance, it was found that dolphins and whales were mammals, not fishes. Because of convergent evolution - the tendency for distantly-related species to adapt similarly to a given environment - it is often not easy to properly classify organisms merely by observing their exterior, such a body that works well in an aquatic environment. In lieu of genetic analysis, or even of sufficient observation of them in the wild, the main progress in understanding differences among marine animals was often in dissecting the corpses of creatures found stranded or caught in nets, or reconstructing them from skeletal remains. Together with fossil evidence, insights were developed about their origins and differences from others' origins. | |
− | + | The Space Shuttle was a reusable spacecraft system used by {{w|NASA}} from 1981 to 2011, after which it was decommissioned. In this comic, Randall suggests that the nature of the shuttle was in doubt or misunderstood until either an intact 'specimen' (of which there are four) had been dissected, or possibly the remains were reassembled from the two that were lost in accidents. | |
− | + | With its shape, shown in the small image, and the tail fin, it looks a bit like a {{w|Osteichthyes|bony fish}} or {{w|Batoidea|ray}}. [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AfnvFnzs91s But it is actually not an animal]. The joke is that after the shuttle was taken out of use, its skeleton was analyzed, and as shown in the comic, was found to have a skeleton typical of a mammal, with details such as the pentadactyl quadripedal bodyform hidden beneath its aerodynamic sweep, as well as having bones (i.e., not primarily cartilage). This morphology is similar to that possessed by a whale. Of course, the skeleton of a spacecraft is not made of bones but of metal and plastic {{Citation needed}} and other manufactured materials. | |
− | + | The title-text conflates the now-extinct {{w|Steller's sea cow}}, an aquatic mammal related to manatees and named after explorer/zoologist Georg Steller, with the word "stellar", which means being of a star or stars, such as inter-stellar space or stellar masses. | |
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==Transcript== | ==Transcript== | ||
− | :[In the upper right part of the panel there is a small drawing of the Space Shuttle as seen from above. Beneath it, and to | + | :[In the upper right part of the panel there is a small drawing of the Space Shuttle as seen from above. Beneath it, and to it's left, is a much larger drawing with the same outline as the Shuttle. But this time the outer layers have been removed to reveal the inside. This has revealed a skeleton taking up the entire space inside. The head is in the front, and legs and tail at the rear, with arms and fingers in the wings. Probably looking somewhat like a bats "hand/wings". The bones are white with the frame of the shuttle gray or black. Some of the lines outlining the design of the shuttle is both on the small and the large drawing, along the wings and rear engines. Both feet and arms have five fingers/toes.There seems to be 24 ribs in the very long rib-cage.] |
:[Caption beneath the panel:] | :[Caption beneath the panel:] | ||
− | :The Space Shuttle was long assumed to be a type of fish or shark, but after it was decommissioned in 2011, | + | :The Space Shuttle was long assumed to be a type of fish or shark, but after it was decommissioned in 2011, anaylysis of its skeleton determined that it was actually a mammal. |
{{comic discussion}} | {{comic discussion}} |