In the 1890s, Perigenfalken eggs were collected in North Dakota. Scientists thought that this pesticide DDT was causing eggshell thinning. And so it was a great scientific design that was possible because they had access to these collections. It's so cool to see current research being done on specimens that have been collected 100 years ago.
This encore includes tons of previously cut and never-before-heard bonus material (and maybe an eggregious number of sidenotes) about how perfect and weird eggs are. The biggest eggs! The smallest eggs! The people arrested for stealing the most eggs! Oologist Dr. John Bates gives Alie a tour of the egg vault at the Field Museum of Chicago and it was a barrage of beautiful sights and shocking facts about bird butts. Get ready for speckly eggs, falcon tales, delicate treasures, snake nesting, pigeon mysteries, modern research with old artifacts, Easter trivia, and whether or not you can hatch chickens from grocery store eggs. Also the carnival ride Alie will never ever ever go on.
Field Museum of Chicago
The Book of Eggs
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Sound editing by Steven Ray Morris & Jarrett Sleeper
Music by Nick Thorburn
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