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8.30pm Thoroughly Modern: The Bicycle
4/4. Showing as part of the Birth of Now season. Major improvements were made by the Edwardians to bicycles, and it has even been suggested that the gene pool was enlarged by their popularity. |
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#2
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On 8 May, 12:49, Paul George wrote:
8.30pm Thoroughly Modern: The Bicycle 4/4. Showing as part of the Birth of Now season. Major improvements were made by the Edwardians to bicycles, and it has even been suggested that the gene pool was enlarged by their popularity. I've heard the gene pool improvement theory before. It goes like this:- Before the invention of the bicycle there was no cheap reliable transport for the masses to use, so many a young man was restricted to the number of young ladies that he could court, which lead to a large number of first-cousin marriages, hence the effect of poor genes became concentrated. When young men could get out and about on bicycles, they went further afield to court, thus preventing the need to marry their cousins, and so improving the condition of the population in general. David Lloyd |
#3
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On 8 May 2007 05:10:14 -0700, David Lloyd wrote:
On 8 May, 12:49, Paul George wrote: 8.30pm Thoroughly Modern: The Bicycle 4/4. Showing as part of the Birth of Now season. Major improvements were made by the Edwardians to bicycles, and it has even been suggested that the gene pool was enlarged by their popularity. I've heard the gene pool improvement theory before. It goes like this:- Before the invention of the bicycle there was no cheap reliable transport for the masses to use, so many a young man was restricted to the number of young ladies that he could court, which lead to a large number of first-cousin marriages, hence the effect of poor genes became concentrated. When young men could get out and about on bicycles, they went further afield to court, thus preventing the need to marry their cousins, and so improving the condition of the population in general. Likewise with the wages of farm labourers. The bicycle gave them a much wider choice of employers, so they could shop around for the best deal. |
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In message
Marc Brett wrote: On 8 May 2007 05:10:14 -0700, David Lloyd wrote: On 8 May, 12:49, Paul George wrote: 8.30pm Thoroughly Modern: The Bicycle 4/4. Showing as part of the Birth of Now season. Major improvements were made by the Edwardians to bicycles, and it has even been suggested that the gene pool was enlarged by their popularity. I've heard the gene pool improvement theory before. It goes like this:- Before the invention of the bicycle there was no cheap reliable transport for the masses to use, so many a young man was restricted to the number of young ladies that he could court, which lead to a large number of first-cousin marriages, hence the effect of poor genes became concentrated. When young men could get out and about on bicycles, they went further afield to court, thus preventing the need to marry their cousins, and so improving the condition of the population in general. Likewise with the wages of farm labourers. The bicycle gave them a much wider choice of employers, so they could shop around for the best deal. The geneticist Steve Jones from UCL has referred to the impact of the bicycle on diversification of the human gene pool in his books and other writings and presentations. However a friend of mine whose research expertise is in Social and Political Sciences, and who had compiled a large database from UK census information, when alerted to Steve Jones' hypothesising, was unable to find any strong evidence for greater mobility of partners in marriage following the invention of the bicycle. Mike -- o/ \\ // |\ ,_ o Mike Clark \__,\\ // __o | \ / /\, "A mountain climbing, cycling, skiing, " || _`\,_ |__\ \ | immunology lecturer, antibody engineer and ` || (_)/ (_) | \corn computer user" |
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On 8 May, 12:49, Paul George wrote:
8.30pm Thoroughly Modern: The Bicycle 4/4. Showing as part of the Birth of Now season. Major improvements were made by the Edwardians to bicycles, and it has even been suggested that the gene pool was enlarged by their popularity. Managed to catch the last 10 mins. Loved the race on Edwardian machines. Also liked the closing comment about how the age of the car is drawing to an end, but bicycles will be with us forever. |
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POHB wrote:
Managed to catch the last 10 mins. Loved the race on Edwardian machines. Also liked the closing comment about how the age of the car is drawing to an end, but bicycles will be with us forever. If you check the BBC4 schedules, it's being repeated several times over the next few days. 19:30 on Sunday 03:10 on Monday I thought I spotted more than that in the paper, but that's all that's showing on the BBC website. I haven't watched it yet. I think I recorded it at about 03:00 this morning. -- Danny Colyer URL:http://www.colyer.plus.com/danny/ Reply address is valid, but that on my website is checked more often "Daddy, put that down. Daddy, put that down. Daddy, put that down. Daddy, why did you put that down?" - Charlie Colyer, age 2 |
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