Mystery in the Chrysalis
By Rhiannonw
- 2228 reads
How does the caterpillar change,
and all its innards rearrange?
Emerging from its egg with lumps,
inactive miniscule disc-bumps
to one day form leg-joints and wings,
compound eyes, and nerves, and things
to make them work:
when stilled inside a chrysalis
some enzymes form nutritious gloop
digesting innards into soup
to feed the growth and activation
of these disc-buds – transformation
while other actions in suspense —
but
how is it done? What causes this
cascading complicated sequence?
Research has found the DNA
is far more complex, than was thought,
so many ways are known today
of reading off the information –
backwards, forwards, dicing, slicing,
recombining, cutting, pasting,
starting here, then starting there,
switching on and off as needed,
all precisely timed, directed
– multiple instructions coded
in one section, guiding, using
nano-molecule machines,
organized and synchronized –
podgy caterpillar re-formed
incredibly transformed.
The more we know,
the more we find we do not know
and cannot ever fully know,
and comprehend –
increasing knowledge magnifies
our view of wonder and surprise.
Taking up the first verse of last week's https://www.abctales.com/story/rhiannonw/%E2%80%A6
[IP: Transformation]
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Comments
Such an innocent tiny
Such an innocent tiny catterpillar turning in to a beautiful butterfly brings so much wonder to this world, it really does make you think!
Nice one Rhiannon.
Jenny.
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it's that there seems nothing
it's that there seems nothing of the caterpillar, isn't it? I've not seen a 3d printer (still don't fully believe they exist!) but the idea of melting down a substance and putting it into a printer to make a new thing, is like that. And whatever brain the caterpillar has, that's the weirdest thing, even the butterfy's brain is completely new, no remembering, but the butterfly eggs do. So the message is kept. And we think we are clever! You put your degree to great use explaing this simply, will read it again and again
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I did not realise the brain
I did not realise the brain stayed the same, that is slightly more understandable. How you have described it is easier to get than anything I had learned about it before! Wish you had been my biology teacher at school :0)
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I always will love the
I always will love the transition to the beautiful butterfly. One of the miracles of creation. Loved the rhythm.
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