Wednesday, January 24, 2024

FOSSILS

New oviraptor dinosaur from the US Hell Creek Formation lived at the end of the Age of Dinosaurs and weighed about the same as an average woman



Peer-Reviewed Publication

PLOS

A new oviraptorosaur (Dinosauria: Theropoda) from the end-Maastrichtian Hell Creek Formation of North America 

IMAGE: 

ARTIST’S DEPICTION OF EONEOPHRON INFERNALIS (TOP LEFT), MOR 752 (BOTTOM LEFT), AND ANZU WYLIEI (RIGHT) IN THE HELL CREEK FORMATION. ILLUSTRATION BY ZUBIN ERIK DUTTA.

view more 

CREDIT: IMAGE CREDIT: ATKINS-WELTMAN ET AL., 2024, PLOS ONE, CC-BY 4.0 (HTTPS://CREATIVECOMMONS.ORG/LICENSES/BY/4.0/)




New oviraptor dinosaur from the US Hell Creek Formation lived at the end of the Age of Dinosaurs and weighed about the same as an average woman

###

Article URL:  https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0294901

Article Title: A new oviraptorosaur (Dinosauria: Theropoda) from the end-Maastrichtian Hell Creek Formation of North America

Author Countries: USA, Canada

Funding: Funding for histology processing provided to HNW by Oklahoma State University for Health Sciences. Funding to GFF provided by the Royal Society (Grant NIF\R1\191527) and a Banting Fellowship (NSERC). The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.

New pieces in the puzzle of first life on Earth


Research team discovers complex microbial communities in ecosystems over 3 billion years ago


Peer-Reviewed Publication

UNIVERSITY OF GÖTTINGEN

A drill core sample from the Barberton greenstone belt used in the study. The dark layers contain particles of carbonaceous matter, the altered remains from Palaeoarchaean microorganisms. 

IMAGE: 

A DRILL CORE SAMPLE FROM THE BARBERTON GREENSTONE BELT USED IN THE STUDY. THE DARK LAYERS CONTAIN PARTICLES OF CARBONACEOUS MATTER, THE ALTERED REMAINS FROM PALAEOARCHAEAN MICROORGANISMS.

view more 

CREDIT: MANUEL REINHARDT



Microorganisms were the first forms of life on our planet. The clues are written in 3.5 billion-year-old rocks by geochemical and morphological traces, such as chemical compounds or structures that these organisms left behind. However, it is still not clear when and where life originated on Earth and when a diversity of species developed in these early microbial communities. Evidence is scarce and often disputed. Now, researchers led by the University of Göttingen and Linnӕus University in Sweden have uncovered key findings about the earliest forms of life. In rock samples from South Africa, they found evidence dating to around 3.42 billion years ago of an unprecedentedly diverse carbon cycle involving various microorganisms. This research shows that complex microbial communities already existed in the ecosystems during the Palaeoarchaean period. The results were published in the journal Precambrian Research.

 

The researchers analysed well-preserved particles of carbonaceous matter – the altered remains of living organisms – and the corresponding rock layers from samples of the Barberton greenstone belt, a mountain range in South Africa whose rocks are among the oldest on the Earth's surface. The scientists combined macro and micro analyses to clearly identify original biological traces and distinguish them from later contamination. They identified geochemical "fingerprints" of various microorganisms, including those that must have used sunlight for energy, metabolised sulphate and probably also produced methane. The researchers determined the respective role of the microorganisms in the carbon cycle of the ecosystem at the time by combining geochemical data with findings on the texture of the rocks obtained from thin section analysis with a microscope. "By discovering carbonaceous matter in primary pyrite crystals and analysing carbon and sulphur isotopes in these materials, we were able to distinguish individual microbial metabolic processes," explains the senior author of the study, Dr Henrik Drake from Linnӕus University.

 

First author Dr Manuel Reinhardt, from Göttingen University’s Geosciences Centre, adds: "We didn't expect to find traces of so many microbial metabolic processes. It was like the proverbial search for a needle in a haystack." The study provides a rare glimpse into the Earth's early ecosystems. "Our findings significantly advance the understanding of ancient microbial ecosystems and open up new avenues for research in the field of palaeobiology."

 

Original publication: Reinhardt, M. et al. Aspects of the biological carbon cycle in a ca. 3.42-billion-year-old marine ecosystem. Precambrian Research (2024). DOI: 10.1016/j.precamres.2024.107289

 

Contact:

Dr Manuel Reinhardt

University of Göttingen

Geosciences Centre

Goldschmidtstraße 3, 37077 Göttingen, Germany

Tel: +49 (0)551 39-13756

Email: manuel.reinhardt@uni-goettingen.de

www.uni-goettingen.de/de/646954.html

 

 


North China fossils show eukaryotes first acquired multicellularity 1.63 billion years ago


Peer-Reviewed Publication

CHINESE ACADEMY OF SCIENCES HEADQUARTERS

Multicellular fossils come from the late Paleoproterozoic Chuanlinggou Formation 

IMAGE: 

MULTICELLULAR FOSSILS COME FROM THE LATE PALEOPROTEROZOIC CHUANLINGGOU FORMATION

view more 

CREDIT: MIAO LANYUN



In a study published in Science Advances on Jan. 24, researchers led by Prof. ZHU Maoyan from the Nanjing Institute of Geology and Palaeontology of the Chinese Academy of Sciences reported their recent discovery of 1.63-billion-year-old multicellular fossils from North China.

These exquisitely preserved microfossils are currently considered the oldest record of multicellular eukaryotes. This study is another breakthrough after the researchers’ earlier discovery of decimeter-sized eukaryotic fossils in the Yanshan area of North China, and pushes back the emergence of multicellularity in eukaryotes by about 70 million years.

All complex life on Earth, including diverse animals, land plants, macroscopic fungi, and seaweeds, are multicellular eukaryotes. Multicellularity is key to eukaryotes acquiring organismal complexity and large size, and is often regarded as a major transition in the history of life on Earth. However, scientists have been unsure when eukaryotes evolved this innovation.

Fossil records offering convincing evidence show that eukaryotes with simple multicellularity, such as red and green algae, and putative fungi, appeared as early as 1.05 billion years ago. Older records have claimed to be multicellular eukaryotes, but most of them are controversial because of their simple morphology and lack of cellular structure.

"The newly discovered multicellular fossils come from the late Paleoproterozoic Chuanlinggou Formation that is about 1,635 million years old. They are unbranched, uniseriate filaments composed of two to more than 20 large cylindrical or barrel-shaped cells with diameters of 20–194 μm and incomplete lengths up to 860 μm. These filaments show a certain degree of complexity based on their morphological variation," said MIAO Lanyun, one of the researchers.

The filaments are constant, or tapered throughout their length, or tapered only at one end. Morphometric analyses demonstrate their morphological continuity, suggesting they represent a single biological species rather than discrete species. The fossils have been named Qingshania magnifica, 1989, a form taxon with similar morphology and size, and are described as being from the Chuanlinggou Formation.

A particularly important feature of Qingshania is the round intracellular structure (diameter 15–20 μm) in some cells. These structures are comparable to the asexual spores known in many eukaryotic algae, indicating that Qingshania probably reproduced by spores.

In modern life, uniseriate filaments are common in both prokaryotes (bacteria and archaea) and eukaryotes. The combination of large cell size, wide range of filament diameter, morphological variation, and intracellular spores demonstrate the eukaryotic affinity of Qingshania, as no known prokaryotes are so complex. Filamentous prokaryotes are generally very small, about 1–3 μm in diameter, and are distributed across more than 147 genera of 12 phyla. Some cyanobacteria and sulfur bacteria can reach large sizes, up to 200 μm thick, but these large prokaryotes are very simple in morphology, with disc-shaped cells, and are not reproduced by spores.

The best modern analogues are some green algae, although filaments also occur in other groups of eukaryotic algae (e.g., red algae, brown algae, yellow algae, charophytes, etc.), as well as in fungi and oomycetes.

"This indicates that Qingshania was most likely photosynthetic algae, probably belonging to the extinct stem group of Archaeplastids (a major group consisting of red algae, green algae and land plants, as well as glaucophytes), although its exact affinity is still unclear," said MIAO.

In addition, the researchers conducted Raman spectroscopic investigation to test the eukaryotic affinity of Qingshania from the perspective of chemical composition, using three cyanobacterial taxa for comparison. Raman spectra revealed two broad peaks characteristic of disordered carbonaceous matter. Furthermore, the estimated burial temperatures using Raman parameters ranged from 205–250 °C, indicating a low degree of metamorphism. Principal component analysis of the Raman spectra sorted Qingshania and the cyanobacterial taxa into two distinct clusters, indicating that carbonaceous matter of Qingshania is different from that of cyanobacterial fossils, further supporting the eukaryotic affinity of Qingshania.

Currently, the oldest unambiguous eukaryotic fossils are unicellular forms from late Paleoproterozoic sediments (~1.65 billion years ago) in Northern China and Northern Australia. Qingshania appeared only slightly later than these unicellular forms, indicating that eukaryotes acquired simple multicellularity very early in their evolutionary history.

Since eukaryotic algae (Archaeplastids) arose after the last eukaryotic common ancestor (LECA), the discovery of Qingshania, if truly algal in nature, further supports the early appearance of LECA in the late Paleoproterozoic—which is consistent with many molecular clock studies—rather than in the late Mesoproterozoic of about 1 billion years ago.

This study was funded by the National Key Research and Development Program of China, the National Natural Science Foundation of China, and the Innovation Cross-Team of CAS.

 

New research challenges hunter-gatherer narrative


Peer-Reviewed Publication

UNIVERSITY OF WYOMING

Wilamaya Patjxa excavation 

IMAGE: 

THE WILAMAYA PATJXA ARCHEOLOGICAL SITE IN PERU PRODUCED HUMAN REMAINS SHOWING THAT THE DIETS OF EARLY PEOPLE OF THE ANDES WERE PRIMARILY COMPOSED OF PLANT MATERIALS.

view more 

CREDIT: RANDY HAAS




The oft-used description of early humans as “hunter-gatherers” should be changed to “gatherer-hunters,” at least in the Andes of South America, according to groundbreaking research led by a University of Wyoming archaeologist.

Archaeologists long thought that early human diets were meat based. However, Assistant Professor Randy Haas’ analysis of the remains of 24 individuals from the Wilamaya Patjxa and Soro Mik'aya Patjxa burial sites in Peru shows that early human diets in the Andes Mountains were composed of 80 percent plant matter and 20 percent meat.

The study, titled "Stable isotope chemistry reveals plant-dominant diet among early foragers on the Andean Altiplano," has been published by the peer-reviewed journal PLOS ONE. It applies methods in isotope chemistry and statistical modeling to unveil a surprising twist in early Andean societies and traditional hunter-gatherer narratives.

“Conventional wisdom holds that early human economies focused on hunting -- an idea that has led to a number of high-protein dietary fads such as the Paleodiet,” Haas says. “Our analysis shows that the diets were composed of 80 percent plant matter and 20 percent meat.”

For these early humans of the Andes, spanning from 9,000 to 6,500 years ago, there is indeed evidence that hunting of large mammals provided some of their diets. But the new analysis of the isotopic composition of the human bones shows that plant foods made up the majority of individual diets, with meat playing a secondary role.

Additionally, burnt plant remains from the sites and distinct dental-wear patterns on the individuals’ upper incisors indicate that tubers -- or plants that grow underground, such as potatoes -- likely were the most prominent subsistence resource.

“Our combination of isotope chemistry, paleoethnobotanical and zooarchaeological methods offers the clearest and most accurate picture of early Andean diets to date,” Haas says. “These findings update our understanding of earliest forager economies and the pathway to agricultural economies in the Andean highlands.”

Joining Haas in the study were researchers from Penn State University, the University of California-Merced, the University of California-Davis, Binghamton University, the University of Arizona and the National Register of Peruvian Archaeologists.

Undergraduate students also had the opportunity to conduct research during the initial 2018 excavations at the Wilamaya Patjxa burial site.

Currently a Ph.D. student in anthropology at Penn State University, Jennifer Chen, the journal article’s lead author and a former undergraduate student in Haas' research lab, performed the isotope lab work and much of the isotope analysis following the excavations.

“Food is incredibly important and crucial for survival, especially in high-altitude environments like the Andes,” Chen says. “A lot of archaeological frameworks on hunter-gatherers, or foragers, center on hunting and meat-heavy diets -- but we are finding that early hunter-gatherers in the Andes were mostly eating plant foods like wild tubers."

Haas notes that archaeologists now have the tools to understand early human diets, and their results are not what they anticipated. This case study demonstrates for the first time that early human economies, in at least one part of the world, were plant based.

“Given that archaeological biases have long misled archaeologists -- myself included -- in the Andes, it is likely that future isotopic research in other parts of the world will similarly show that archaeologists have also gotten it wrong elsewhere,” he says.

Haas investigates human behavior in forager societies of the past to better understand human behavior in the present. He leads archaeological excavations and survey projects in the Andes and mountain regions of western North America. To learn more about his research, email Haas at whaas@uwyo.edu.

 

Ancient brown bear genomes sheds light on Ice Age losses and survival



Peer-Reviewed Publication

UNIVERSITY OF COPENHAGEN - THE FACULTY OF HEALTH AND MEDICAL SCIENCES




The brown bear is one of the largest living terrestrial carnivores, and is widely distributed across the Northern Hemisphere. Unlike many other large carnivores that went extinct at the end of the last Ice Age (cave bear, sabretoothed cats, cave hyena), the brown bear is one of the lucky survivors that made it through to the present. The question has puzzled biologists for close to a century - how was this so?

Brown bears are ecologically flexible and have a broad dietary range. While they are carnivores, their diets can also consist primarily of plant matter making them adaptable to environmental changes. However, brown bears also experienced extensive range reductions and regional extinctions during the last Ice Age. Brown bears used to occupy a much wider range including Ireland, Honshu, the largest island of Japan, and Quebec (Canada). 

Did the decline or disappearance of bear populations in certain areas happen because bears left those places for better ones that they still currently live, or did unique groups of bears with distinct genes inhabit those areas and go extinct, leading to a loss in the overall diversity of the species?

By studying the genomes of ancient brown bears dated to between 3,800 and 60,000 years old, including several individuals from outside their current range, researchers from the University of Copenhagen, Denmark and the University of Yamanashi, Japan sought to address this question by investigating the evolutionary relationships between brown bears across space and time. 

Their study showed that brown bears did not simply move with the shifting environment, but populations went extinct. “Our analyses showed that ancient brown bears represent genetic diversity absent in today’s populations” says Takahiro Segawa, lead author of the study. “While brown bears survived global extinction, they suffered considerable losses of their historical range and genetic diversity”. This new perspective highlights a crucial period in the brown bear’s history and that they also faced challenges during and after the last Ice Age.

“As we continue to grapple with the challenges of coexistence between humans and wildlife, insights from the deep past are invaluable in shaping a sustainable future.” adds Michael Westbury, the senior author of the study. “Although studying recent specimens can provide some insights, by including samples from the past and from areas a species no longer exists, we can better quantify how patterns of current diversity arose, and inform predictions about how they may respond to future environmental change.” 

You can read more about this in the study “The origins and diversification of Holarctic brown bear populations inferred from genomes of past and present populations” in Proceedings of the Royal Society B.

 

Moving humanoid robots outside research labs: the evolution of the iCub3 avatar system


The fully immersive iCub3 avatar system has been developed by researchers at the Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia addressing challenges posed by real-world scenario. A paper published in Science Robotics explains the different stages of its development.

Peer-Reviewed Publication

ISTITUTO ITALIANO DI TECNOLOGIA - IIT

The evolution of the iCub3 avatar system 

VIDEO: 

OVER THE PAST FOUR YEARS, THE RESEARCH TEAM AT THE ARTIFICIAL AND MECHANICAL INTELLIGENCE (AMI) LAB AT THE ISTITUTO ITALIANO DI TECNOLOGIA IN GENOVA (ITALY) HAS DEVELOPED ADVANCED AVATAR TECHNOLOGIES, KNOWN AS THE ICUB3 SYSTEM, IN CONTINUOUS TESTING WITH REAL-WORLD SCENARIOS. THE SYSTEM WAS UTILIZED TO ENABLE A HUMAN OPERATOR TO REMOTELY VISIT LOCATIONS 300 KM AWAY, TO ENTERTAIN THE PUBLIC AT EVENTS AND TELEVISION APPEARANCES, AND TO COMPETE IN THE INTERNATIONAL CHALLENGE ANA AVATAR XPRIZE. IN A RESEARCH PAPER PUBLISHED IN SCIENCE ROBOTICS TODAY, THE GROUP HIGHLIGHTS THE CHALLENGES THEY FACED, AND THE SOLUTIONS IMPLEMENTED TO DEVELOP THE AVATAR SYSTEM.

view more 

CREDIT: IIT-ISTITUTO ITALIANO DI TECNOLOGIA


Genova (Italy), 24 January 2024 - Over the past four years, the research team at the Artificial and Mechanical Intelligence (AMI) lab at the Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia (IIT-Italian Institute of Technology) in Genova (Italy) has developed advanced avatar technologies, known as the iCub3 system, in continuous testing with real-world scenarios. The system was utilized to enable a human operator to remotely visit locations 300 km away, to entertain the public at events and television appearances, and to compete in the international challenge ANA Avatar XPrize. In a research paper published in Science Robotics today, the group highlights the challenges they faced, and the solutions implemented to develop the avatar system. Their approach highlights how crucial is for research to extend beyond laboratory confines and addresses the difficulties posed by the real-world variability , in order to develop a robust humanoid robotic platform that can soon become part of the economic and productive system. The iCub3 system has already evolved into a new robot, the ergoCub robot, designed to maximise acceptability within work environments.

The research group at the Artificial and Mechanical Intelligence (AMI) lab at the IIT in Genoa (Italy) is coordinated by the Italian researcher Daniele Pucci and comprises about fifty researchers. The iCub3 avatar system is mainly composed of the robot iCub3 - which is one of the last versions of the iCub humanoid robot born in IIT 20 years ago - and the wearable technologies named iFeel that track human body motions. The avatar system has been designed to facilitate the embodiment of humanoid robots by human operators encompassing aspects such as locomotion, manipulation, voice, and facial expressions with comprehensive sensory feedback including visual, auditory, haptic, weight, and touch modalities. It has been developed by IIT in collaboration with the Italian National Institute for Insurance against Accidents at Work (INAIL).

The IIT research group tested and tailored the iCub3 avatar system in three different real scenarios.

In November 2021, during the first test a human operator located in Genoa controlled the avatar at the Biennale di Venezia in Venice (approximately 300 kilometers away) having the possibility to visit remotely the Italian art exhibition. The challenges were about assuring stable remote communications between the two sites, within a limited testing timeframe. Furthermore, the robot's movement and interaction with the surrounding environment had to be cautious and safe, given the delicate nature of the art exhibitions. Pucci’s group utilized the IIT wearable iFeel suit to track the operator’s body motions, and the avatar system transferred these movements onto the iCub3 robot in Venice, allowing it to replicate the user's actions in Genova. The operator exercised precise control over the robot's body parts, including the fingers and eyelids. Additionally, custom haptic devices were employed to allow the operator to feel a hug from the remote location. The transmission was streamed over a standard optical fiber internet connection, resulting in around a hundred milliseconds of delay.

In June 2022, the second test took place at the Italian digital innovation festival, We Make Future Show, presenting additional challenges. The operator in Genova controlled a robot positioned at the festival venue in Rimini (approximately 300 km away). The robot's task involved receiving and transporting a payload from a person while navigating the theater stage before an audience of around 2000 spectators. The performance was conducted live, amidst considerable electromagnetic interference. The IIT research group introduced specialized haptic devices to enable the operator to perceive the weight carried by the robot, and enhanced the robot's expressive abilities, as it had to entertain the audience.

In Novembre 2022, the entire architecture was presented at the All Nippon Airways (ANA) Avatar XPrize competition in Los Angeles. The contest arena resembled a panorama taken from Mars, or another remote planet, suggesting space exploration as a future potential application of avatars. Each avatar was operated by individuals who were not part of the research team and required training just before the race; additionally, they had only 25 minutes to complete 10 different tasks. The iCub3 robot had to perform heavy-duty tasks within a limited time, a situation that pushed the robot to its limits. The IIT team equipped the robot’s hands with sensorized skin to allow it to perceive the texture of manipulated objects. The robot control was designed to be as intuitive as possible, allowing the operator to have direct control over all robot parts and capabilities. For example, the operator could control the robot’s locomotion by walking in place, creating a heightened sense of embodiment.

The experience acquired by Daniele Pucci’s team was fundamental to turn the iCub3 avatar system into a new robot, the ergoCub robot, designed to maximise acceptability within the work environment. The new humanoid ergoCub, currently being developed at IIT, is meant to minimise risk and fatigue in collaborative tasks for workers for industry and healthcare.

Daniele Pucci and the iCub3 avatar system 

The iCub3 robot avatar system has been designed to facilitate the embodiment of humanoid robots by human operators encompassing aspects such as locomotion, manipulation, voice, and facial expressions with comprehensive sensory feedback including visual, auditory, haptic, weight, and touch modalities

CREDIT

IIT-Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia

 

Women and people of color remain “invisible” as most people pick white men as their heroes, study shows



Peer-Reviewed Publication

UNIVERSITY OF EXETER




Women and people of colour remain invisible to many people in Britain and the USA as people pick white men as their heroes instead, a study shows. Their achievements are often forgotten or not recognised when people are choosing who inspires them, researchers have found.

Most people said their family and friends, people closest to them, were their heroes. These ‘everyday’ heroes accounted for one in three choices in Britian and 41 per cent in the US.

In both countries, politicians were popular as heroes, with more common choices including Ronald Reagan, Abraham Lincoln, and Barak Obama, and British Prime Ministers such as Winston Churchill and Margaret Thatcher.

Human rights activists and campaigners were the sixth most popular category in both countries. This included Martin Luther King Jr, whose popularity competes with Nelson Mandela and Malala Yousafzai in the UK, and Mahatma Gandhi and Malcolm X in the US.

But there were striking differences between the two countries. Celebrities, actors, and TV presenters were the second popular category of hero in Britain, with only 1.2 per cent choosing religious figures. Religious figures were the second most popular type of hero in the US, reaching almost 7 per cent of all reported heroes. British respondents tended to choose living religious leaders such as the Pope compared to the US respondents’ affinity with Biblical figures.

British and US women were more likely than men to have women-heroes. American and British men were around four times less likely to have a woman-hero than women - 9 to 34 per cent in the US and 9 to 40 per cent in Britain.

The analysis by Ekaterina Kolpinskaya from the University of Exeter and Nataliya Danilova from the University of Aberdeen is based on YouGov surveys that asked 1,686 adults in Britain and 1,000 in the USA who their biggest personal hero was.

Dr Kolpinskaya said: “The allure of heroes is enduring. We have found people’s gender and ethnicity has an impact on who their hero is. There is a persistent gap between the publicly prominent white male hero-figure and a perpetually ‘invisible’, and ‘forgotten’ heroine. People’s choice of hero reflects their own sex and race and ethnicity.”

Only one in four Britons and one in five Americans said they had a heroine.

When family members were excluded only 11 per cent of Americans choose a women public figure hero, compared to one in five Britons. The under 25’s in the US were more likely to have a women-hero than those who were older while rates for older and younger people were similar in the UK at 25 per cent.

In Britain, supporting the Conservative Party increases the probability of having a woman-hero - 27 per cent chance compared to 13 per cent for Labour, 22 per cent for Liberal Democrats and 14 per cent for UKIP. Researchers believe this represents a ‘Thatcher effect’ – with Margaret Thatcher accounting for 18 per cent of all women-heroes listed by Conservative supporters.

Supporting the Republican Party in the US substantially reduced the chance of having a woman-hero with the Republicans having a 13 per cent chance of having a woman-hero compared to the Democrats’ 25 per cent.

In Britain, although racial prejudice is declining, non-white minority heroes account for only 15 per cent of all heroes compared to 31 per cent in the US. This includes 21 per cent for women. Ethnic minority hero-figures tend to include non-British political activists such as Nelson Mandela, Martin Luther King Jr., Malala Yousafzai, Mahatma Gandhi, and Muhammad Ali, while only three Britons made it to the list, including boxer Lennox Lewis, Formula 1 driver Lewis Hamilton and a Victoria Cross recipient Johnson Beharry. The study says there is an acute need for the public recognition of ethnic minorities in the fabric of British society.

Dr Danilova said: “In both countries, ethnic minorities belong to another group of ‘invisible’, and often overlooked heroes. But there was a much wider presence of non-white Americans in the ‘pool’ of the US heroes. This included prominent public figures such as Barack Obama and Martin Luther King Jr.

“As in Britain, American women are disproportionately – and statistically significantly – more likely to have ethnic minority heroes with one in three women declaring an ethnic minority figures among their family and friends.”

African Americans (88 per cent), Hispanics (70 per cent) and Americans belonging to other ethnic minority groups (89 per cent) had a strikingly higher probability of having a non-white hero compared to white Americans (6.5 per cent).