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Jellyfish Age Backwards: Nature's Secrets to Longevity [Hardback]

3.92/5 (6443 ratings by Goodreads)
  • Formāts: Hardback, 288 pages, height x width x depth: 243x161x30 mm, weight: 463 g
  • Izdošanas datums: 17-Jan-2023
  • Izdevniecība: Little Brown and Company
  • ISBN-10: 0316414581
  • ISBN-13: 9780316414586
  • Formāts: Hardback, 288 pages, height x width x depth: 243x161x30 mm, weight: 463 g
  • Izdošanas datums: 17-Jan-2023
  • Izdevniecība: Little Brown and Company
  • ISBN-10: 0316414581
  • ISBN-13: 9780316414586
Offers a revelatory scientific deep dive into how plants and animals have already unlocked the secrets to immortality—and the lessons they hold for us all.

Blending together the most cutting-edge research and stories from habitats all over the world, a molecular biologist explores what nature has to teach us about aging, revealing life spans we cannot imagine and physiological gifts that feel closer to magic than reality.

A Sunday Times (UK) Best Book of the Year • This eye-opening book offers a "clear and captivating" (Dr. Kris Verburgh?) scientific deep dive into how plants and animals have already unlocked the secrets to immortality–and the lessons they hold for us all. 

Recent advances in medicine and technology have expanded our understanding of aging across the animal kingdom, and our own timeless quest for the fountain of youth. Yet, despite modern humans living longer today than ever before, the public’s understanding of what is possible is limited to our species—until now. In this spunky, effervescent debut, the key to immortality is revealed to be a superpower within reach. With mind-bending stories from the natural world and our own, Jellyfish Age Backwards reveals lifespans we cannot imagine and physiological gifts that feel closer to magic than reality:

  •  There is a Greenland shark that was 286 years old when the Titanic sank, and is currently 390, making it older than the United States. Scientists predict it will live for another 100 years.
  •  Trees and lobsters don’t “age” in the way we know it. They simply get bigger and bigger.
  •  There are forms of radiation that have been known to actually increase the lifespans of certain species, from tortoises to naked mole-rats.
  •  There's a species of jellyfish, the size of a fingernail, that can age forwards, then, when threatened, age backwards and begin the process all over again.
 

Mixing cutting-edge research and stories from habitats all around the world, molecular biologist Nicklas Brendborg explores extended life cycles in all its varieties. Along the way, we meet a man who fasted for over a year; a woman who edited her own DNA; redwoods that survive thousands of years; and in the soil of Easter Island, the key to eternal youth. Jellyfish Age Backwards is a love letter to the immense power of nature, and what the immortal lives of many of earth's animals and plants can teach us about the secrets to longevity.



Jellyfish Age Backwards offers a revelatory scientific deep dive into how plants and animals have already unlocked the secrets to immortality – and the lessons they hold for us all

Recent advances in medicine and technology have expanded our understanding of aging across the animal kingdom, and our own timeless quest for the fountain of youth. Yet, despite modern humans living longer today than ever before, the public’s understanding of what is possible is limited to our species—until now. In this spunky, effervescent debut, the key to immortality is revealed to be a superpower within reach. With mind-bending stories from the natural world and our own, Jellyfish Age Backwards reveals lifespans we cannot imagine and physiological gifts that feel closer to magic than reality:

  • There is a Greenland shark that was 286 years old when the Titanic sank, and is currently 390, making it older than the United States. Scientists predict it will live for another 100 years.
  • Trees and lobsters don’t “age” in the way we know it. They simply get bigger and bigger.
  • There are forms of radiation that have been known to actually increase the lifespans of certain species, from tortoises to naked mole-rats.
  • There's a species of jellyfish, the size of a fingernail, that can age forwards, then, when threatened, age backwards and begin the process all over again.

Mixing cutting-edge research and stories from habitats all around the world, molecular biologist Nicklas Brendborg explores extended life cycles in all its varieties. Along the way, we meet a man who fasted for over a year; a woman who edited her own DNA; redwoods that survive thousands of years; and in the soil of Easter Island, the key to eternal youth. Jellyfish Age Backwards is a love letter to the immense power of nature, and what the immortal lives of many of earth's animals and plants can teach us about the secrets to longevity.

Introduction - The Fountain of Youth 1(4)
Part I Nature's Wonders
5(44)
1 The Record Book of Longevity
7(13)
2 Sun, Palm Trees and a Long Life
20(6)
3 Genes Are Overrated
26(11)
4 The Disadvantages of Immortality
37(12)
Part II Scientists' Discoveries
49(114)
5 What Doesn't Kill You
51(11)
6 Does Size Matter?
62(10)
7 The Secrets of Easter Island
72(5)
8 The One to Unite Them All
77(5)
9 Infamous High School Biology
82(5)
10 Adventures in Immortality
87(8)
11 Zombie Cells and How to Get Rid of Them
95(7)
12 Winding the Biological Clock
102(15)
13 Bloody Marvellous
117(11)
14 Microbe Struggles
128(12)
15 Hiding in Plain Sight
140(7)
16 Flossing for Longevity
147(11)
17 Immune Rejuvenation
158(5)
Part III Good Advice
163(56)
18 Starving for Fun
164(8)
19 An Old Custom in New Clothes
172(8)
20 Cargo Cult Nutrition
180(11)
21 Food for Thought
191(4)
22 Medieval Monks to Modern Science
195(7)
23 What Gets Measured Geft Managed
202(13)
24 Mind Over Matter
215(4)
Epilogue 219(2)
Acknowledgements 221(2)
Bibliography 223(36)
Index 259