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KQED's Forum

Finding Awe and Inspiration in the Natural World's ‘Vanishing Treasures’

KQED's Forum

KQED

News, Politics, News Commentary

4.2726 Ratings

🗓️ 12 November 2024

⏱️ 56 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

“The time to fight, with all our ingenuity and tenacity, and love and fury, is now.” That sounds like a rallying cry for democrats after their profound election defeat last week. But it’s in fact an environmental call to action from Katherine Rundell, whose new book “Vanishing Treasures” celebrates some of the earth’s most imperiled and unusual creatures. We’ll talk to Rundell about wombats that carry their young in upside-down pouches and excrete cube-shaped poop; the American wood frog that freezes itself solid to get through winter; the golden mole that’s evolved to be iridescent. What extraordinary creatures would you like to pay tribute to? Guests: Katherine Rundell, author, "Vanishing Treasures: A Bestiary of Extraordinary Endangered Creatures", Her previous books include "Impossible Creatures" and "Why You Should Read Children's Books, Even Though You Aren't So Old and Wise" Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

Every runner knows the moment when everything clicks.

0:04.0

When your legs lock into a rhythm, the aches float away and doubts fade.

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Replaced by a feeling of euphoria.

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It's why you lace up at dawn.

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Why little rain doesn't stop you.

0:17.0

Why one run turns into a habit.

0:20.0

So next time you go for a run, chase that runs high. why one run turns into a habit.

0:24.3

So next time you go for a run, chase that runs high.

0:28.1

Learn more about running and go wild at puma.com.

0:31.3

Greetings boomtown.

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1:06.2

From KQBD in San Francisco, I'm Mina Kim.

1:12.0

Coming up on forum, if you're seeking to be inspired in this moment, the animal kingdom is a great place to start. Consider the American wood frog that freezes itself solid to get through winter,

1:18.0

or the common swift that never stops flying for at least 10 months of every year. Skywashed,

1:23.6

sleeping on the wing, it has no need to land, writes Catherine Rundle, who reminds us in her new book,

1:29.4

Vanishing Treasures, that the Earth produces astonishing, inconceivable creatures who show us

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