The fascinating and dangerous places scientists arent exploring Ella AlShamahi

So I’ve got something that I’m
slightly embarrassed to admit to.

At the age of 17,

as a creationist,

I decided to go to university
to study evolution

so that I could destroy it.

(Laughter)

I failed.

I failed so spectacularly
that I’m now an evolutionary biologist.

(Applause)

So I’m a paleoanthropologist,
I’m a National Geographic Explorer

specializing in fossil hunting in caves

in unstable, hostile
and disputed territories.

And we all know that
if I was a guy and not a girl,

that wouldn’t be a job description,
that would be a pick-up line.

(Laughter)

Now, here’s the thing.
I do not have a death wish.

I’m not an adrenaline junkie.

I just looked at a map.

See, frontline exploratory science
does not happen as much

in politically unstable territories.

This is a map of all the places
which the British Foreign Office

have declared contain
red zones, orange zones

or have raised some kind
of a threat warning about.

Now I’m going to go out on a limb here
and say that it is a tragedy

if we’re not doing frontline exploratory
science in a huge portion of the planet.

And so science has a geography problem.

Also, as a paleoanthropologist,

guys, this is basically a map
of some of the most important places

in the human journey.

There are almost definitely
fascinating fossils to be found here.

But are we looking for them?

And so as an undergraduate,
I was repeatedly told

that humans, be they ourselves,
homo sapiens, or earlier species,

that we left Africa
via the Sinai of Egypt.

I’m English, as you can
probably tell from my accent,

but I am actually of Arab heritage,

and I always say that I’m
very, very Arab on the outside.

You know, I can really be passionate.

Like, “You’re amazing! I love you!”

But on the inside, I’m really English,
so everybody irritates me.

(Laughter)

It’s true.

And the thing is,
my family are Arab from Yemen,

and I knew that that channel,

Bab-el-Mandeb,

is not that much of a feat to cross.

And I kept asking myself
this really simple question:

if the ancestors to New World monkeys
could somehow cross the Atlantic Ocean,

why couldn’t humans cross
that tiny stretch of water?

But the thing is, Yemen,

compared to, let’s say, Europe,

was so understudied

that it was something akin
to near virgin territory.

But that, along with its location,
made the sheer potential for discovery

so exciting,

and I had so many questions.

When did we first
start using Bab-el-Mandeb?

But also, which species of human
besides ourselves made it to Yemen?

Might we find a species
as yet unknown to science?

And it turned out, I wasn’t the only one
who had noticed Yemen’s potential.

There was actually
a few other academics out there.

But sadly, due to political instability,
they moved out, and so I moved in.

And I was looking for caves:

caves because caves
are the original prime real estate.

But also because if you’re looking
for fossils in that kind of heat,

your best bet for fossil preservation
is always going to be caves.

But then, Yemen took
a really sad turn for the worse,

and just a few days
before I was due to fly out to Yemen,

the civil war escalated
into a regional conflict,

the capital’s airport was bombed

and Yemen became a no-fly zone.

Now, my parents made this decision
before I was born:

that I would be born British.

I had nothing to do
with the best decision of my life.

And now …

Now the lucky ones
in my family have escaped,

and the others, the others
are being been bombed

and send you WhatsApp messages
that make you detest your very existence.

This war’s been going on for four years.

It’s been going on for over four years,
and it has led to a humanitarian crisis.

There is a famine there,

a man-made famine.

That’s a man-made famine,
so not a natural famine,

an entirely man-made famine
that the UN has warned

could be the worst famine
the world has seen in a hundred years.

This war has made it
clear to me more than ever

that no place, no people
deserve to get left behind.

And so I was joining these other teams,
and I was forming new collaborations

in other unstable places.

But I was desperate
to get back into Yemen,

because for me, Yemen’s really personal.

And so I kept trying to think
of a project I could do in Yemen

that would help highlight
what was going on there.

And every idea I had just kept failing,

or it was just too high-risk,
because let’s be honest,

most of Yemen is just too dangerous
for a Western team.

But then I was told that Socotra,
a Yemeni island,

was safe once you got there.

In fact, it turned out there was a few
local and international academics

that were still working there.

And that got me really excited,

because look at Socotra’s
proximity to Africa.

And yet we have no idea
when humans arrived on that island.

But Socotra, for those of you who know it,

well, let’s just say you probably know it
for a completely different reason.

You probably know it
as the Galapagos of the Indian Ocean,

because it is one of the most
biodiverse places on this earth.

But we were also getting information

that this incredibly delicate
environment and its people

were under threat

because they were at the frontline
of both Middle Eastern politics

and climate change.

And it slowly dawned on me
that Socotra was my Yemen project.

And so I wanted to put together
a huge multidisciplinary team.

We wanted to cross the archipelago
on foot, camel and dhow boat

to conduct a health check of this place.

This has only been attempted
once before, and it was in 1999.

But the thing is, that is not
an easy thing to pull off.

And so we desperately needed a recce,

and for those of you who aren’t
familiar with British English,

a recce is like a scouting expedition.

It’s like a reconnaissance.

And I often say that a really big
expedition without a recce

is a bit like a first date
without a Facebook stalk.

(Laughter)

Like, it’s doable, but is it wise?

(Laughter)

There’s a few too many
knowing laughs in this room.

Anyway, so then our recce team thankfully
were no strangers to unstable places,

which, let’s be honest,
is kind of important

because we were trying to get
to a place between Yemen and Somalia,

And after calling in
what felt like a million favors,

including to the deputy governor,

we finally found ourselves on the move,

albeit on a wooden cement cargo ship

sailing through pirate waters
in the Indian Ocean

with this as a toilet.

(Laughter)

Can you guys see this?

You know how everybody has
their worst toilet story?

Well, I’ve never swam
with dolphins before.

I just went straight to pooping on them.

(Laughter)

And also, I genuinely discovered
that I am genuinely less stressed

by pirate waters

than I am with a cockroach infestation

that was so intense

that at one point I went belowdeck,

and the floor was black and it was moving.

(Audience moans)

Yeah, and at night there was
three raised platforms to sleep on,

but there was only –
let’s say there was four team members,

and the thing is, if you got
a raised platform to sleep on,

you only had to contend
with a few cockroaches during the night,

whereas if you got the floor,
good luck to you.

And so I was the only girl in the team
and the whole ship,

so I got away without
sleeping on the floor.

And then, on, like,
the fourth or fifth night,

Martin Edström looks at me and goes,
“Ella, Ella I really believe in equality.”

(Laughter)

So we were sailing on that
cement cargo ship for three days,

and then we slowly started seeing land.

And after three years of failing,

I was finally seeing Yemen.

And there is no feeling on earth
like that start of an expedition.

It’s this moment where
you jump out of a jeep

or you look up from a boat

and you know that
there’s this possibility,

it’s small but it’s still there,

that you’re about to find something

that could add to or change our knowledge
of who we are and where we come from.

There is no feeling like it on earth,

and it’s a feeling
that so many scientists have

but rarely in politically unstable places.

Because Western scientists
are discouraged or all-out barred

from working in unstable places.

But here’s the thing:

scientists specialize in the jungle.

Scientists work in deep cave systems.

Scientists attach themselves to rockets
and blow themselves into outer space.

But apparently,
working in an unstable place

is deemed too high-risk.

It is completely arbitrary.

Who here in this room
wasn’t brought up on adventure stories?

And most of our heroes
were actually scientists and academics.

Science was about going out
into the unknown.

It was about truly global exploration,
even if there were risks.

And so when did it become acceptable
to make it difficult for science to happen

in unstable places?

And look, I’m not saying
that all scientists should go off

and start working in unstable places.

This isn’t some gung-ho call.

But here’s the thing:

for those who have done the research,
understand security protocol

and are trained,

stop stopping those who want to.

Plus,

just because one part of a country
is an active war zone

doesn’t mean the whole country is.

I’m not saying we should go
into active war zones.

But Iraqi Kurdistan looks
very different from Fallujah.

And actually, a few months
after I couldn’t get into Yemen,

another team adopted me.

So Professor Graeme Barker’s team
were actually working in Iraqi Kurdistan,

and they were digging up Shanidar Cave.

Now, Shanidar Cave a few decades earlier

had unveiled a Neanderthal
known as Shanidar 1.

Now, for a BBC/PBS TV series
we actually brought Shanidar 1 to life,

and I want you guys to meet Ned,
Ned the Neanderthal.

Now here’s the coolest thing about Ned.

Ned, this guy,

you’re meeting him before his injuries.

See, it turned out
that Ned was severely disabled.

He was in fact so disabled that
there is no way he could have survived

without the help of other Neanderthals.

And so this was proof that,

at least for this population
of Neanderthals at this time,

Neanderthals were like us,

and they sometimes looked after
those who couldn’t look after themselves.

Ned’s an Iraqi Neanderthal.

So what else are we missing?

What incredible scientific discoveries

are we not making
because we’re not looking?

And by the way, these places,
they deserve narratives of hope,

and science and exploration
can be a part of that.

In fact, I would argue
that it can tangibly aid development,

and these discoveries
become a huge source of local pride.

And that brings me to the second reason
why science has a geography problem.

See, we don’t empower
local academics, do we?

Like, it’s not lost on me

that in my particular field
of paleoanthropology

we study human origins,

but we have so few diverse scientists.

And the thing is, these places
are full of students and academics

who are desperate to collaborate,

and the truth is

that for them,

they have fewer security issues than us.

I think we constantly forget that for them
it’s not a hostile environment;

for them it’s home.

I’m telling you,

research done in unstable places
with local collaborators

can lead to incredible discoveries,

and that is what we are
hoping upon hope to do in Socotra.

They call Socotra

the most alien-looking place on earth,

and myself, Leon McCarron, Martin Edström
and Rhys Thwaites-Jones could see why.

I mean, look at this place.

These places, they’re not hellholes,
they’re not write-offs,

they’re the future frontline
of science and exploration.

90 percent of the reptiles on this island,

37 percent of the plant species
exist here and nowhere else on earth,

and that includes this species
of dragon’s blood tree,

which actually bleeds this red resin.

And there’s something else.

People on Socotra,
some of them still live in caves,

and that is really exciting,

because it means if a cave
is prime real estate this century,

maybe it was a few thousand years ago.

But we need the data to prove it,
the fossils, the stone tools,

and so our scouting team
have teamed up with other scientists,

anthropologists and storytellers,

international as well as local,
like Ahmed Alarqbi,

and we are desperate
to shed a light on this place

before it’s too late.

And now, now we just somehow
need to get back

for that really big expedition,

because science,

science has a geography problem.

You guys have been
a really lovely audience.

Thank you.

(Applause)

所以我有一些我
有点不好意思承认的事情。

在 17 岁时,

作为一个创造论者,

我决定去
大学学习进化论,

这样我就可以摧毁它。

(笑声)

我失败了。

我失败得如此惊人
,以至于我现在是一名进化生物学家。

(掌声)

所以我是一名古人类学家,
我是一名国家地理探险家,

专门

在不稳定、敌对
和有争议的地区的洞穴中寻找化石。

而且我们都知道,
如果我是一个男人而不是一个女孩,

那将不是工作描述,
那将是一个接机线。

(笑声)

现在,事情就是这样。
我没有死亡的愿望。

我不是肾上腺素瘾君子。

我刚看了一张地图。

看,前线探索性科学

在政治不稳定的地区发生的并不多。

这是一张
英国外交部

已宣布包含
红色区域、橙色区域

或已提出
某种威胁警告的所有地点的地图。

现在我要冒昧
地说,

如果我们不在
地球的大部分地区进行前沿探索性科学,那将是一场悲剧。

所以科学有一个地理问题。

此外,作为古人类学家,

伙计们,这基本上是人类旅程
中一些最重要地点

的地图。

几乎肯定
可以在这里找到迷人的化石。

但是我们在寻找他们吗?

因此,作为一名本科生,
我一再被

告知人类,无论是我们自己、
智人还是更早的物种

,我们都是
通过埃及的西奈半岛离开非洲的。

我是英国人,
你可能从我的口音中可以看出,

但我实际上是阿拉伯血统,

而且我总是说我
在外表上非常非常阿拉伯。

你知道,我真的很热情。

比如,“你太棒了!我爱你!”

但在内心深处,我真的是个英国人,
所以每个人都激怒了我。

(笑声)

这是真的。

问题是,
我的家人是来自也门的阿拉伯人,

而且我知道那个通道,

Bab-el-Mandeb

,并不是什么值得跨越的壮举。

我一直在问
自己一个非常简单的问题:

如果新大陆猴子的祖先
能够以某种方式越过大西洋,

为什么人类不能越过
那一小片水域?

但问题是,

与比方说欧洲相比,也门的

研究如此之少

,以至于它
类似于接近处女地。

但是,再加上它的位置,
使得发现的巨大潜力

如此令人兴奋

,我有很多问题。

我们什么时候
开始使用 Bab-el-Mandeb?

但是,
除了我们之外,还有哪些人类来到了也门?

我们可能会发现一个
科学尚不为人知的物种吗?

事实证明,我并不是唯一
一个注意到也门潜力的人。

实际上还有其他一些学者。

但遗憾的是,由于政治不稳定,
他们搬走了,所以我搬进来了。

我一直在寻找洞穴:

洞穴,因为洞穴
是最初的黄金地段。

但也因为如果你
在那种高温下寻找化石,

保存化石的最佳选择
总是洞穴。

但随后,也门
的情况变得非常糟糕

,就
在我准备飞往也门的前几天

,内战升级
为地区冲突

,首都机场被炸

,也门成为禁飞区 .

现在,我的父母
在我出生之前就做出了这个决定

:我将出生在英国。


与我一生中最好的决定无关。

现在……

现在
我家的幸运儿已经逃脱了

,其他人,其他
人正在被轰炸,

并向您发送 WhatsApp 消息
,让您厌恶自己的存在。

这场战争已经打了四年。

它已经持续了四年多,
并导致了人道主义危机。

那里有饥荒

,人为的饥荒。

那是人为的饥荒,
而不是自然的饥荒

,完全是人为的饥荒
,联合国警告说,这

可能
是一百年来世界上最严重的饥荒。

这场战争
比以往任何时候都更清楚地告诉我

,没有地方,没有人
应该被抛在后面。

所以我加入了这些其他团队
,我正在其他不稳定的地方建立新的合作关系

但我很想
回到也门,

因为对我来说,也门真的很私人。

所以我一直在想
我可以在也门做的一个项目,

这将有助于突出
那里正在发生的事情。

而我刚刚失败的每一个想法,

或者只是太冒险了,
因为老实说,

也门的大部分地区
对于西方球队来说太危险了。

但后来有人告诉我
,也门的索科特拉岛,

一旦你到达那里就很安全了。

事实上,事实证明,仍有一些
本地和国际学者

在那里工作。

这让我非常兴奋,

因为看看索科特拉岛
与非洲的距离。

然而,我们不知道
人类何时到达那个岛屿。

但是索科特拉岛,对于那些知道它的人来说,

好吧,我们只是说你可能
出于完全不同的原因知道它。

你可能知道它
是印度洋的加拉帕戈斯群岛,

因为它是
地球上生物多样性最丰富的地方之一。

但我们也得到信息

,这个极其脆弱的
环境及其人民

正受到威胁,

因为他们
处于中东政治

和气候变化的前沿。

我慢慢
意识到索科特拉岛是我的也门项目。

所以我想组建
一个庞大的跨学科团队。

我们想
步行、骆驼和单桅帆船穿越群岛,

对这个地方进行健康检查。

这之前只尝试
过一次,那是在 1999 年。

但问题是,这并不是
一件容易的事情。

所以我们迫切需要一个recce

,对于那些不
熟悉英式英语的人来说

,recce 就像一次侦察探险。

这就像一个侦察。

我经常说,没有记录的真正大型

探险有点像没有 Facebook 跟踪的第一次约会

(笑声)

就像,这是可行的,但它是明智的吗?

(笑声)

这个房间里有太多会心的笑声。

无论如何,幸好我们的侦察团队
对不稳定的地方并不陌生,

说实话,这
很重要,

因为我们正试图到达
也门和索马里之间的一个地方

,在召唤
了几百万个人情之后,

包括副省长在内,

我们终于发现自己在移动,

尽管是在一艘在印度洋海盗水域航行的木制水泥货船

,以此作为厕所。

(笑声)

你们能看到这个吗?

你知道每个人都有
自己最糟糕的厕所故事吗?

嗯,我以前从来没有
和海豚一起游泳过。

我直接去拉屎了。

(笑声)

而且,我真的发现

海盗水域

给我带来的压力真的比蟑螂

严重

,以至于我一度走到甲板下

,地板是黑色的,而且还在移动。

(观众呻吟)

是的,晚上有
三个高台睡觉,

但只有——
假设有四个团队成员

,问题是,如果你有
一个高台睡觉,

你就只有一个
在夜间与几只蟑螂抗争,

而如果你得到了地板,
祝你好运。

所以我是团队
和整艘船上唯一的女孩,

所以我没有
睡在地板上就逃走了。

然后,
在第四个或第五个晚上,

Martin Edström 看着我说:
“Ella,Ella,我真的相信平等。”

(笑声)

所以我们在那
艘水泥货船上航行了三天,

然后慢慢开始看到陆地。

经过三年的失败,

我终于见到了也门。

地球上没有
像探险开始那样的感觉。

就在
你从吉普车上跳下来

或从船上抬头看的那一刻

,你知道
有这种可能性,

它很小但它仍然存在

,你即将找到

一些可以增加或改变我们
对谁的认识的东西 我们在哪里,我们来自哪里。

地球上没有这样的感觉

,这种感觉是很多科学家都有的,

但在政治不稳定的地方很少见。

因为西方科学家
被劝阻或全力

禁止在不稳定的地方工作。

但事情是这样的:

科学家专门研究丛林。

科学家在深洞穴系统中工作。

科学家们将自己附在火箭上
并将自己吹到外太空。

但显然,
在不稳定的地方工作

被认为风险太大。

这是完全任意的。

这个房间里的谁
不是在冒险故事中长大的?

我们的大多数
英雄实际上都是科学家和学者。

科学是关于
走向未知的。

这是关于真正的全球探索,
即使存在风险。

那么
,让科学难以

在不稳定的地方发生是什么时候变得可以接受的呢?

看,我并不是
说所有科学家都应该离开

并开始在不稳定的地方工作。

这不是什么热血沸腾的电话。

但事情是这样的:

对于那些做过研究、
了解安全协议

并接受过培训的人,

不要阻止那些想要这样做的人。

另外,

仅仅因为一个国家的一部分
是活跃的战区

并不意味着整个国家都是。

我并不是说我们应该
进入活跃的战区。

但伊拉克库尔德斯坦看起来
与费卢杰大不相同。

实际上,
在我无法进入也门几个月后,

另一个团队收养了我。

所以 Graeme Barker 教授的
团队实际上是在伊拉克库尔德斯坦工作

,他们正在挖掘 Shanidar 洞穴。

现在,几十年前,Shanidar Cave

揭开了名为 Shanidar 1 的尼安德特人的
面纱。

现在,对于一部 BBC/PBS 电视连续剧,
我们实际上将 Shanidar 1 带入了生活

,我希望你们能见到 Ned,
Ned 尼安德特人。

现在这是关于内德的最酷的事情。

奈德,这家伙,

你要在他受伤之前见到他。

看,原来
内德是重度残疾。

事实上,他是如此残疾,
如果

没有其他尼安德特人的帮助,他是不可能活下来的。

所以这证明了,

至少对于
此时的尼安德特人来说,

尼安德特人和我们一样

,他们有时会照顾
那些无法照顾自己的人。

内德是伊拉克尼安德特人。

那么我们还缺少什么? 我们没有做出

哪些令人难以置信的科学发现


因为我们不去寻找?

顺便说一句,这些地方,
它们值得讲述希望

,科学和探索
可以成为其中的一部分。

事实上,我
认为它可以切实促进发展

,这些发现
成为当地自豪感的巨大源泉。

这让我想到了
科学存在地理问题的第二个原因。

看,我们不赋予
当地学者权力,是吗?

就像,我并没有

忘记在我的特定
古人类学领域

我们研究人类起源,

但我们很少有不同的科学家。

问题是,这些
地方到处

都是渴望合作的学生和学者,

而事实是

,对他们来说,

他们的安全问题比我们少。

我认为我们经常忘记对他们
来说这不是一个敌对的环境。

对他们来说,这是家。

我告诉你,与当地合作者

在不稳定的地方
进行的研究

可以带来令人难以置信的发现

,这就是我们
希望在索科特拉岛做的事情。

他们称索科特拉岛

是地球上最像外星人的地方,

而我自己、莱昂·麦卡伦、马丁·埃德斯特罗姆
和里斯·思韦茨-琼斯都明白其中的原因。

我的意思是,看看这个地方。

这些地方,它们不是地狱,
它们不是注销,

它们
是科学和探索的未来前沿。

这个岛上 90% 的爬行动物,

37% 的植物物种都
存在于此,地球上其他任何地方都没有

,其中包括
这种龙血树,

它实际上会流血这种红色树脂。

还有别的东西。

索科特拉岛的人们
,他们中的一些人仍然住在洞穴里

,这真的很令人兴奋,

因为这意味着如果
洞穴是本世纪的黄金地段,那

可能是几千年前的事了。

但我们需要数据来证明这一点
,化石,石器

,所以我们的侦察团队
已经与其他科学家、

人类学家和讲故事的人合作,包括

国际和本地的,
比如 Ahmed Alarqbi

,我们迫切
希望能阐明这一点 在

为时已晚之前在这个地方。

而现在,现在我们只需要以某种方式

返回那次真正的大探险,

因为科学,

科学有一个地理问题。

你们真是一群可爱的观众。

谢谢你。

(掌声)