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Stephan Heblich

πŸ‘€ Speaker
40 total appearances

Appearances Over Time

Podcast Appearances

Freakonomics Radio
This Is Your Brain on Pollution (Update)

There's a story of microevolutionary biology, which is about the peppered moth.

Freakonomics Radio
This Is Your Brain on Pollution (Update)

I'm not sure if you've ever heard about this.

Freakonomics Radio
This Is Your Brain on Pollution (Update)

The peppered moth appears in the UK in two varieties, a darker and lighter variety.

Freakonomics Radio
This Is Your Brain on Pollution (Update)

And it's well known that before industrialization in the north of England, the lighter variety was the predominant species.

Freakonomics Radio
This Is Your Brain on Pollution (Update)

And this was basically because it could hide on trees from predators.

Freakonomics Radio
This Is Your Brain on Pollution (Update)

But then as cold smoke started turning trees darker, we see a rise in the instance of this darker version of the peppered moth.

Freakonomics Radio
This Is Your Brain on Pollution (Update)

In cities in the Western Hemisphere, winds blow from the west to the east.

Freakonomics Radio
This Is Your Brain on Pollution (Update)

And you might observe that in a lot of these cities, east sides are more deprived.

Freakonomics Radio
This Is Your Brain on Pollution (Update)

We started wondering if this was driven by coal smoke during industrialization and a sorting of poor people into the East Side and rich people away from the East Side.

Freakonomics Radio
This Is Your Brain on Pollution (Update)

And we wanted to understand if this has long-lasting effects.

Freakonomics Radio
This Is Your Brain on Pollution (Update)

We started looking into historical maps and found out that Victorian cartographers were absolutely stunning in the level of detail that they drew into their maps.

Freakonomics Radio
This Is Your Brain on Pollution (Update)

We found the exact location of industrial smokestacks within factory buildings.

Freakonomics Radio
This Is Your Brain on Pollution (Update)

We basically found across all these 70 cities.

Freakonomics Radio
This Is Your Brain on Pollution (Update)

In England, we found about 5,000 chimney locations, like the exact geolocations.

Freakonomics Radio
This Is Your Brain on Pollution (Update)

They were literally like a historical version of Google Maps.

Freakonomics Radio
This Is Your Brain on Pollution (Update)

So after coal smoke came in, we see a resorting of poor households into the east side.

Freakonomics Radio
This Is Your Brain on Pollution (Update)

We have data from 1817, which is before coal smoke was a main fuel for industrialization.

Freakonomics Radio
This Is Your Brain on Pollution (Update)

And we find that in 1817, the wind direction where coal smoke would blow to doesn't have an effect.

Freakonomics Radio
This Is Your Brain on Pollution (Update)

We had a census where we had all the names and addresses transcribed.

Freakonomics Radio
This Is Your Brain on Pollution (Update)

And because there was by now a lot of coal being burned.

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