Sunday, March 14, 2010
Shmegeggi of The Cavemen By Harvey Kurtzman & William Stout
Twenty years ago Marvel Comic’s published “Harvey Kurtzman’s Strange Adventures” through their Epic Comics line. The oversized hardcover featured a bunch of Mad-style stories written by Kurtzman and drawn by some of the best in the business.
This story has Kurtzman showcasing his Goodman Beaver character in a different guise, while Bill Stout lovingly channels Frazetta's finest cavemen & women.
Saturday, March 13, 2010
The Scorpion's Reversible Evolution
Blind scorpions that live in the stygian depths of caves are throwing light on a long-held assumption that specialized adaptations are irreversible evolutionary dead-ends.According to a new phylogenetic analysis of the family Typhlochactidae, scorpions currently living closer to the surface (under stones and in leaf litter) evolved independently on more than one occasion from ancestors adapted to life further below the surface (in caves).
"Our research shows that the evolution of troglobites, or animals adapted for life in caves, is reversible," says Lorenzo Prendini.. "Three more generalized scorpion species living closer to the surface evolved from specialized ancestors living in caves deep below the surface."
The family Typhlochactidae includes nine species of scorpions endemic to the karstic regions of eastern Mexico. All species in the family have adapted to the dark with features such as loss of eyes and reduced pigmentation.
Three of the species (including T. mitchelli) live closer to the surface and are more generalized morphologically than the other six, making this family an excellent model with which to test and falsify Cope's Law of the unspecialized (novel evolutionary traits tend to originate from a generalized member of an ancestral taxon) and Dollo's Law of evolutionary irreversibility (specialized evolutionary traits are unlikely to reverse).
The results show that adaptation to life in caves has reversed among this group of scorpions: two of the less specialized, surface-living species, T. mitchelli and T. sylvestris, share a common ancestor with a much more cave-adapted species, and a similar pattern was found for the third less specialized, surface-living species, T. sissomi.
"Scorpions have been around for 450 million years, and their biology is obviously flexible," says Prendini. "This unique group of eyeless Mexican scorpions may have started re-colonizing niches closer to the surface from the deep caves of Mexico after their surface-living ancestors were wiped out by the nearby Chicxuluxb impact along with non-avian dinosaurs, ammonites, and other species." link
Ref.: Troglomorphism, trichobothriotaxy and typhlochactid phylogeny (Scorpiones, Chactoidea): more evidence that troglobitism is not an evolutionary dead-end L. Prendini, et al. Cladistics 26: 117-142.
Friday, March 5, 2010
The First Batman (1956) by Bill Finger & Shelly Moldoff
Cover by Sheldon Moldoff
Pretty convenient, as well, to find a film (with sound!) showing Wayne, Sr., in action!
CLICK TO ENLARGE
Detective Comics #235 (Sept. 1956) © DC Comics
Script by Bill Finger; Pencils by Sheldon Moldoff; Inks by Stan Kaye
Monday, March 1, 2010
The Vanguard (1977) by Alex Toth
The return of The Fox to the DC universe has drawn attention to the great Alex Toth version of the character> that briefly ran for too few stories in the ill-fated Red Circle comic line back in the late 1970’s. I seem to remember that the following Vanguard story published in Sal Quartuccio’s ‘ground level’ (remember that term?) Hot Stuf was reworked by Toth from an unpublished Fox story.
Sunday, February 21, 2010
We Were 20th Century Cavemen! (1959)
Cover by Bob Brown
In fact the Rhedosaurus from ’20,000 Fathoms’ turns up on page 6 and the helicopter from The Land Unknown brings in the troops on page 7 of this long forgotten tale.
Saturday, February 20, 2010
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