Luminous creatures : the history and science of light production in living organisms / Michel Anctil
By: Anctil, Michel [author].
Publisher: Montreal ; London ; Chicago : McGill-Queen's University Press, ©2018Copyright date: ©2018Description: 467 pages : illustrations, portraits ; 24 cm.Content type: text Media type: unmediated Carrier type: volumeISBN: 9780773553125.Subject(s): Bioluminescence | Bioluminescence -- Research -- HistoryGenre/Form: History. | Print books.Current location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds |
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On Shelf | QH641 .A53 2018 (Browse shelf) | Available | AU00000000013920 |
Includes bibliographical references (pages 411-459) and index
Prologue -- Part one: Groping in the dark. 1. Glows, flashes, and marvel-mongers ; 2. The Age of Enlightenment ; 3. A deeper probing of nature aglow -- Part two: The lights beneath the surface. 4. The birth of scientific ocean exploration ; 5. The mystery of a lit underworld ; 6. Inside the light-producing organs -- Part three: Opening up new vistas of research. 7. Paolo Panceri and the Italian cohort ; 8. Raphaël Dubois and the chemistry of living light ; 9. Bioluminescence spreads further afield -- Part four: The American ascendancy. 10. E. Newton Harvey and the Princeton Laboratory ; 11. The triumph of the biochemists ; 12. Through a glass, brightly - William Beebe's bathysphere -- Part five: Off centre stage. 13. The peculiar career of Yata Haneda ; 14. Circling the luminaries ; 15. A bioluminesence expedition -- Part six: The leap to current understanding. 16. Probing oceanic bioluminescence ; 17. Understanding how light sources are controlled ; 18. Unravelling molecular mechanisms -- Epilogue
"Charles Darwin was perplexed by the chaotic diversity of luminous organisms, which he found difficult to reconcile with his evolutionary theory. For other reasons bewilderment confronted many observers watching living lights throughout the ages. It fell on naturalists and scientists to try and make sense of the dazzling luminous displays by fireflies and other organisms. In Luminous Creatures, Michel Anctil shows how the mythical perceptions of bioluminescence gradually gave way to a scientific understanding of its mechanisms, functions and evolution, and to the recognition of its usefulness for biomedical and other applied fields. Naturalists since the Antiquity worked hard at dispelling fanciful ideas about the meaning of living lights by giving as reliable accounts of what they saw as was in their power. But it took the circumnavigations and oceanographic expeditions of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, and the rise of the modern scientific method, for biologists to realize how widespread bioluminescence is on the planet and how diverse are its expressions in light organs and ecological imprints. By the end of the nineteenth century an understanding of the chemical nature and physiological control of the phenomenon was at hand. Technological developments led to the recent explosion of knowledge on the ecology, evolution and molecular biology of bioluminescence. Luminous Creatures tracks these historical events and illuminates the lives and trail-blazing accomplishments of the scientists involved. It offers a unique window in the awe-inspiring, phantasmagorical world of light-producing organisms, viewed from the perspectives of the casual observer and science-maker alike."--