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The Disappearing Star and The Oldest Story Ever Told

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0:00This video is sponsored by Squarespace.
0:03Are you familiar with the group  of stars known as the Pleiades?
0:07Maybe you’ve heard them referred  to as the Seven Sisters.
0:10They’re bright and easy to spot, and as such,  they’re well known to people all over the world.
0:15Cultures from the ancient Greeks to the  Aboriginal Australians tell stories about them.
0:20Often a story of seven women.
0:22Quick problem, though.
0:23Have a quick peek at the star cluster.
0:26In fact, if it’s a clear night where you are,  pause the video and pop outside – I’ll wait.
0:32How many stars do you see?
0:35…Six, huh?
0:35So how did so many people around  the world make up a seventh?
0:39There may be an answer to that question.
0:40An answer that, with a little astrophysics,  
0:43could lead us to one of the oldest  stories humans have ever told.
0:48[♪ INTRO]
0:51The story of the Pleiades as seven women  is remarkably widespread around the world.
0:56In Greek mythology, the seven  stars of the Pleiades are the  
1:00seven daughters of the Titan Atlas,  who was chased by the hunter Orion.
1:04The god Zeus scooped up the seven sisters  and placed them in the sky as stars,  
1:09out of the reach of the nefarious Orion.
1:11Hindu epics call them seven wives of wise men,  
1:15some Aboriginal Australian cultures  call them the seven water girls,
1:20and legends from the Western Mono  of North America call them seven  
1:24wives who were thrown out of their  homes for eating too many onions.
1:29Which is harsh, but… Onion breath.
1:31I get it.
1:32The stories aren’t ubiquitous.
1:34In Japan, for example, the cluster  is referred to as having six stars.
1:39You can even see this in the logo of Japanese car  
1:42maker Subaru, which might as well be the  unofficial state car here in Montana.
1:47Still, with so many cultures with such  similar stories about such a specific,  
1:52incorrect number of stars,
1:54one starts to wonder: is this a coincidence, or  some remarkable common thread throughout humanity?
2:00Aboriginal Australians and ancient  Greeks, for example, had not been in  
2:04contact since their ancestors left Africa  a minimum of sixty thousand years ago.
2:10Yet they tell similar stories.
2:12Does that mean they brought the  same story out of Africa with them?
2:15Could the story of the seven sisters  be tens of thousands of years old?
2:19That would make it one of the  oldest stories we know about.
2:22To find out, let’s look at the stars themselves.
2:25With modern astronomy, we now know the  Pleiades are part of an open star cluster,  
2:30that is, a grouping of stars all born around  the same time from the same huge dust cloud.
2:35With a telescope, we can see that the  Pleiades actually have over a thousand stars.
2:40But our ancestors in ancient  times didn’t have telescopes,  
2:43so let’s focus on what we  can see with our own eyes.
2:46Unless you’ve got spectacular eyesight,  you can probably see six stars.
2:51And even if you can see more than six,  it’s probably way more than seven!
2:56Some of the Pleiades myths  actually acknowledge this mystery,  
2:59with an explanation of how the  seventh sister went missing.
3:02The Greeks, for example, said that one of the  
3:05divine sisters went into hiding for  the shame of marrying a mortal man.
3:09And there are more cultures than just the Greeks  that acknowledge the missing seventh sister.
3:14The Nez Perce, a nation of Indigenous people  from the region around Idaho and Oregon,  
3:18told that one sister fell  in love with a mortal man.
3:22When he died and she was grieving,  she felt her sisters were ashamed,  
3:25so she hid herself behind a veil, leaving  only six sisters visible in the sky.
3:31I mean, basically the same story!
3:33This brings us back to the beginning: what the  heck is going on with that missing seventh star?
3:38Why do all these people across time and  space on Earth agree there’s a seventh star,  
3:43where did it go, and when did it disappear?
3:46One group of researchers thinks  they may have figured it out.
3:50According to their calculations, if  you track the motions of the stars,  
3:54you can see that a seventh bright star  may have actually been visible 100,000  
3:59years ago — we’ll come back to  that time frame in a minute.
4:02Stars move across the night  sky in a couple of ways.
4:05They appear to us to be moving  because Earth is spinning around  
4:09its axis and moving in its orbit around the Sun.
4:12At the same time, stars are  actually moving through space.
4:16Astronomers record how much stars really move  on the night sky, not including the motion  
4:21that we only see because of the spinny  little vantage point on our homeworld.
4:25This is known as a star’s proper motion, usually  measured in tiny fractions of a degree per year.
4:31The researchers thinking about the Pleiades  used these measured proper motions to predict  
4:36where the stars of the Pleiades may have  been hundreds of thousands of years ago.
4:41With this method, the scientists found that two  of the Pleiades — Atlas and Pleione — might have  
4:47been far enough apart that our eyes could see  them as two separate stars back in the day.
4:52They claim that now we only see six  because they’re too close together  
4:55for our eyes to tell them apart without  help from binoculars or a telescope.
5:00One small problem.
5:02This finding was presented in a chapter  in a book, where you’re not required to  
5:06show your work in as much detail as  you would be in a paper in a journal.
5:11So we had to check it ourselves.
5:13Yes, really.
5:14We asked an astrophysicist to  check this and she did the math.
5:18Here it is.
5:19What this shows is that yes, indeed, Atlas  and Pleione used to be farther apart.
5:25Maybe far enough to see them as two  separate objects with the naked eye.
5:29It’s an amazing idea, but there are a few  issues that we’ll get to after this quick break.
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6:17So. We have the claim from these authors  that our ancestors would have been  
6:22able to see seven stars around 100,000 years ago.
6:26That supports the idea that stories  about the Pleiades have been around  
6:29since ancient humans were all  bopping around together in Africa.
6:34It’s a really cool idea, but we  have to note a couple of possible  
6:39snags in the narrative these researchers present.
6:42The stars in the Pleiades are quite young,  
6:44and young stars surrounded by dust can  sometimes be variable in their brightness.
6:49The “Atlas and Pleione on the move” idea  doesn’t account for the fact that maybe  
6:54one of these could have been way  brighter or fainter in the past.
6:58And when we talk about hundred thousand  year timescales there’s a lot more to  
7:02consider with how stars move  that we didn’t really talk about.
7:05For example, Earth’s orbit is  even more complicated than the  
7:10spin around our axis and our orbit around the Sun.
7:13The circularity of Earth’s orbit and the tilt and  
7:16wobble of Earth’s axis are subject to  change over tens of thousands of years.
7:21All of these things could contribute  to Atlas and Pleione appearing in  
7:25slightly different places than our simple  calculation from proper motion predicts.
7:30Plus, even a tiny margin of error  could matter a lot here — as far  
7:34as humans leaving Africa compared  to the time scales of the universe.
7:39And, quick note from when we  were fact checking this script.
7:42The authors of the piece say that the ancestors  of the Aboriginal Australians left Africa   
7:47a hundred thousand years ago, but we aren’t  completely sure where they got that number.
7:52The scholarly consensus seems to be that  although some humans left Africa much earlier,  
7:57the bulk of the migration was  only around 60,000 years ago.
8:01It still works if you imagine that the stars  were visible a hundred thousand years ago and  
8:06people were still telling that story  by the time the migration happened,  
8:09but still, just pointing that out.
8:11The independent scholar Jon White also notes  that some versions of the stories of the seven  
8:16sisters are actually more different from  each other than they seem at first glance.
8:21Like, the Aboriginal Australian stories focus a  lot more on water and ritual than the Greek myth.
8:27Plus, there are a whole bunch of other  Pleiades stories we haven’t even mentioned!
8:31Maōri mythology called them Matariki, and they  represented the eyes of a god lost in battle.
8:38Hawaiian mo’olelo tales say that a greedy  nobleman hoarded food and stored it in the sky,  
8:44out of reach, until a little mouse  came along and gnawed the ropes of  
8:48the net until the food fell back  down to the people on the islands.
8:52Those are only two examples, and  there are plenty more – and I’d say  
8:56they’re both pretty different from seven sisters!
8:59So, after considering all this, did this story  of the Pleiades travel out of Africa with us?
9:05Did people notice a star disappearing  over time, and adjust the story to it?
9:10It’s really hard to be sure, but this is a neat  and at least somewhat scientifically backed idea.
9:15Plus, it’s pretty incredible to think about  humans telling stories about stars for so  
9:20many thousands and thousands of years that a star  was able to move through the sky and disappear.
9:26What an amazing way to preserve the history of the  sky itself – and connect us all at the same time.
9:34[♪ OUTRO]