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Surprising Symmetries

4 Extra Debut. We鈥檝e got two eyes, two arms, two legs - but only one heart. Why!? Drs Rutherford and Fry investigate. From 2022.

Two eyes, two arms, two legs - we鈥檙e roughly symmetrical on the outside, but inside we鈥檙e all over the place!

We just have one heart, which is usually on the left, one liver on the right, one spleen and one appendix.

Why is that?鈥 wonders listener Joanne.

Our science sleuths discover that being symmetrical down the middle - at least on the outside - is by far the most common body plan across the animal kingdom.

Professor Sebastian Shimeld from the University of Oxford takes us on a journey into the deep evolutionary past, to uncover how two-sided body structures first emerged in ancient worm-like creatures, and why this layout eventually proved so useful for swimming, walking and flying.

Garden snails turn out to be a surprising exception 鈥 their shells coil in one direction and on just one side of their body. Professor Angus Davison from the University of Nottingham tells the tale of his international quest to find a romantic partner for Jeremy 鈥 a rare left-coiling snail who could only mate with another left-coiling snail!

Dr Daniel Grimes from the University of Oregon unfolds the delicate mechanisms by which an initally symmetrical embryo starts to develop differently down one side, and everyone puzzles over the mystery of the left-handed 'mirror molecules' - so called L-amino acids - which turn out to be the building blocks of every living organism. A curious case indeed!

Presenters: Hannah Fry and Adam Rutherford

Producer: Ilan Goodman

First broadcast on 大象传媒 Radio 4 in March 2022.

Available now

33 minutes

Broadcasts

  • Thu 3 Mar 2022 16:00
  • Sun 6 Mar 2022 23:00
  • Fri 5 Jan 2024 21:00

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